Remains on a small island in the Baltic Sea suggest that humans kept and cared for wolves for thousands of years before they ...
Scientists have uncovered ancient wolf remains on a small Baltic island where wolves could only have been brought by humans.
New research shows humans may have brought wolves to a remote island, fed them, and cared for them thousands of years ago.
A remarkable discovery on a remote Swedish island is reshaping what scientists know about early human–wolf relationships and ...
New evidence of wolves and humans living together on Swedish island points to likely prehistoric domestication ...
“The genetic data is fascinating,” said Anders Bergström, a lecturer in the School of Biological Sciences in the University ...
It’s five thousand years ago, and a group of humans were living on a limestone rock in the Baltic Sea in Northern Europe rock. The island, Stora Karlsö, is a small one; barely a speck on the map, ...
The cave is low and dark, and it is dug into limestone on a little island in the Baltic Sea where the wind blows salt from all directions. For thousan.
A new line of research has revealed a surprising finding about how the presence of wolves helps keep people safe.