News

In 1988, archaeologists uncovered the grave of a Mesolithic woman who lived in Belgium's Meuse Valley 10,500 years ago. At ...
Now, thanks to ancient DNA and a sculptor’s art, we can meet her again.
The detailed reconstruction brings the prehistoric hunter-gatherer to life, revealing an intriguing set of features.
As part of the ROAM project, experts from Ghent University and artists Kennis & Kennis and Ulco Gimmerveen sculpted the face ...
Researchers atGhent University have reconstructed the visage of a pale, dark-haired, blue-eyed prehistoric woman who lived 10 ...
Using well-preserved ancient DNA, researchers have created a life-like facial reconstruction of a woman who lived in ...
The facial reconstruction, part of the university’s Regional Outlook on Ancient Migration (ROAM) project, reveals that the ...
The Ghent University, in cooperation with the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), has initiated a two-year study, supported by a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) research grant, to investigate ...
In a groundbreaking discovery, scientists have successfully reconstructed the face of a prehistoric woman who lived around 10,500 years ago.
Researchers studying the remains of a prehistoric woman who lived around 10,500 years ago in what is now Belgium have ...
The woman is believed to have been between 35 and 60 years old. Her remains were discovered in a cave during an archaeological dig in the late 1980s.