Two new studies suggest that genetically stable dogs were living among humans in Europe by about 14,000 years ago.
According to researchers, modern dog genetic lineages must have been established by the Upper Palaeolithic, the final phase ...
Two new ancient DNA studies suggest that domesticated dogs were widespread in western Eurasia more than 14,000 years ago ...
Geneticists are pushing back the timeline of when people first domesticated dogs in Europe. Using the DNA from over 200 ...
Two new papers have shown that dogs were fully distinct from wolves—and companions with people—more than 14,000 years ago.
Research suggests hunter-gatherers were feeding dogs and giving them ritual burials as early as the last ice age ...
The discovery of a canine jawbone in a cave in southern England suggests that dogs were domesticated 5,000 years earlier than ...
The origins of how dogs became man's best friend across large swaths of the globe are becoming more clear. Dogs may have been ...
Bones unearthed at several sites show that dogs were widely distributed across West Eurasia by at least 14,000 years ago.
Dogs have a very special bond with humans. They were the first mammal to be domesticated, and we have fashioned them into many different shapes and sizes to fulfil different roles. Wherever you find ...