Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faces a grilling from senators today in his bid to be confirmed as secretary of Health and Human ...
Genetic evidence from a late Iron Age cemetery in southern Britain shows that women were closely related while unrelated men ...
DNA Analysis Reveals Celtic Age Women Were the Original ‘Iron Ladies’, Husbands Moved to Live In With Wife’s Community An ...
For millennia, couples have had to decide where to live. "For the vast majority of human history," says Lara Cassidy, a geneticist at Trinity College Dublin, "societies were centered around ties of ...
Women in Britain 2,000 years ago appear to have passed on land and wealth to daughters not sons as communities were built ...
New DNA analysis reveals women's central role in Iron Age Britain, uncovering a matrilineal society that shaped social and ...
DNA extracted from 57 individuals buried in a 2,000-year-old cemetery provides evidence of a "matrilocal" community in Iron ...
The site belonged to a group the Romans named the “Durotriges,” researchers said, and this ethnic group had other settlements ...
A groundbreaking study of the Durotriges tribe in Iron Age Britain reveals that women played central roles in their society.
Archaeologists discovered evidence of the women-led society in Europe at a rare Iron Age site in southwest England.
The cemetery was used from around 100 B.C. to 200 A.D. "That was really jaw-dropping — it's never been observed before in European prehistory," said study co-author Lara Cassidy, a geneticist at ...
Now, a team of geneticists from Trinity College Dublin and archaeologists from Bournemouth University have discovered ...