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PIX4675757 Man of Neanderthal - Neanderthal man - Scene of daily life of a group of Neanderthalians (Homo neanderthalensis). The Neanderthal Man lived in Europe and Western Asia in Middle Paleolithic, between about 250,000 and 28,000 years BC. Everyday life of Neanderthal men (Homo neanderthalensis). This hominid inhabited Europe and parts of western Asia between 250,000 and 28,000 years ago
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NHM1456533 Homo neanderthalensis, Neanderthal man model, A model reconstruction of a Neanderthal family situated within a cave. Neanderthal lived between 135,000 to 35,000 years ago. Their fossil remains have been discovered mainly in Europe as well as in the Middle East. - AnthropologyLondon UK
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IL309336 moving camp to more favourable hunting grounds;
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KWE270810
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NHM1451386 Homo neanderthalensis, Neanderthal Man, An artists impression of a Neanderthal (Homo neanderthalensis) family based on evidence discovered from excavation sites in Gibraltar. This Neanderthal family depicted as being located outside Gorham's Cave. - AggressionLondon UK
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PIX4664585 Woolly rhinoceros - Woolly rhinoceros - Woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis), also known as cloisonnee nostrils, was a species of large rhinoceros (1.6 to 2 metres high at withers and up to 3.5 metres long, weighing 2 to 3 tonnes) characterized by A thick woolly fleece. He lived in the cold steppes which covered in Pleistocene much of Eurasia. At its peak, less than 30,000 years ago, it was found from central Spain and southern England to Mongolia and southern Siberia. A woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) wanders the snow-covered terrain of Northern Europe 200 thousand years ago. In the foreground is a common rabbit of the family Leporidae. About the size, and maybe a little larger, than today's white rhinoceros, the woolly rhinoceros is believed to be related to the modern Sumatran rhinoceros. Covered with thick fur (AKA pelage), this stocky herbivore was well-suited to the cold climates associated with the Pleistocene glaciations. Woolly rhinoceros remains have been found dating as far back as 3.6 million years and as recent as 8,000 years ago. Cave paintings featuring the woolly rhinoceros have been identified; human and Neanderthal hunting, along with climate change, may have contributed to its extinction
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