Paleolithic Brain Recreated from 17,000-Year-Old Remains in Italy

getty_070916_brain

iStock/Thinkstock(ROME) — Remains from nearly 20,000 years ago are allowing scientists to learn more about the development of brains.

The 17,000-year-old skull, found in the southern Italian region of Calabria’s Grotta del Romito, belonged to a child between 10 and 12 years old. Now scientists are using the skull to recreate a model of a Paleolithic human brain with 3-D scanners.

Fabio Macciardi, a neuroscientist at the University of California Irvine, said there are no other samples found from the same period.

“It’s unique because before the only way to study between us and homosapiens was to make a comparison with monkeys,” he said.

According to Macciardi, the brain will help researchers understand how social interaction, spatial coordination and language progressed, plus they will learn more about what the hunter-gatherers ate.

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

getty_030825_policesirenstock13747

12 injured in shooting at Toronto pub

Douglas Sacha/Getty Images/STOCK (TORONTO) — At least 12 people have been injured in a shooting at a pub in Toronto on Friday night, police said. The victims all ranged in age from their 20s to mid-50s, according