Ancient wolves lived with people on tiny Baltic island. Their bones show shared food and long contact that hints at early wolf management.
Scientists have found wolf remains, thousands of years old, on a small, isolated island in the Baltic Sea—a place where the animals could only have been brought by humans.
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Ancient wolf bones on a Swedish island link to early humans
On a small island in the Baltic Sea, a cache of ancient wolf bones is reshaping how I think about the earliest encounters between humans and large carnivores in northern Europe. The remains, recovered ...
National Geographic Explorer Ronan Donovan, a wildlife biologist turned conservation photographer, will be coming to the ...
Public attitudes toward wolves are split in the Upper Peninsula, a new study finds, with more than 60% of residents surveyed ...
In September 2017 a close friend was killed in Rhodope Prefecture in Norhern Greece. Her death was initially reported as being due to an attack by wolves with the local coroner reported as saying that ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about biodiversity and the hidden quirks of the natural world. From their wolf ancestors to today’s sweet, loyal ...
Fear of the fabled ‘big bad wolf’ has dominated the public perception of wolves for millennia and strongly influences current debates concerning human-wildlife conflict. Humans both fear wolves and, ...
Imagine you're an ancient hunter surveying the icy tundra of what is now California's Sierra Nevada. Covered in furs, armed only with the tools you've made by hand, and sporting a hefty mane of hair, ...
A new video shows wolves may be smarter than we think. Are they smart enough to use tools? And are they getting smarter?
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