Two new ancient DNA studies suggest that domesticated dogs were widespread in western Eurasia more than 14,000 years ago ...
Two new studies suggest that genetically stable dogs were living among humans in Europe by about 14,000 years ago.
Geneticists are pushing back the timeline of when people first domesticated dogs in Europe. Using the DNA from over 200 ...
Bones unearthed at several sites show that dogs were widely distributed across West Eurasia by at least 14,000 years ago.
The origins of how dogs became man's best friend across large swaths of the globe are becoming more clear. Dogs may have been ...
The oldest ancient dog genomes on record all come from a population that lived alongside Ice Age hunter-gatherers across ...
According to researchers, modern dog genetic lineages must have been established by the Upper Palaeolithic, the final phase ...
New DNA evidence from a puppy skull found in Turkey has revealed that dogs may have been domesticated by humans 5,000 years earlier than we previously thought.
Two new papers have shown that dogs were fully distinct from wolves—and companions with people—more than 14,000 years ago.
Bones from the turn of the Holocene indicate that humans were feeding canines—including wolves and coyotes—fish over 10,000 years ago, Reading time 3 minutes Who let the dogs out? It remains unclear, ...
Selection is based on breeding the ones most useful. They don't even need that knowledge. Keep & feed only the ones that are useful and not dangerous to the handler (for guard dogs a vicious reaction ...