6.It's almost inconceivable to write a prehistory of music because Edison invents the phonograph in 1877 and prior to that, we have no record of any sound.
7.Driven in part by a " childhood fascination with prehistory" , Hermes Sanctorum, the company's ceo, is keen to expand the business into making woolly-mammoth burgers.
8.Out of this vast number, the whole of our understanding of human prehistory is based on the remains, often exceedingly fragmentary, of perhaps five thousand individuals.
11.Within a short time span, three-quarters of the world's species disappeared forever, and the giant dinosaurs, flying pterosaurs, shelled squids, and marine reptiles that had flourished for ages faded into prehistory.
12.All this presupposes one essential detail, says Atholl Anderson, professor of prehistory at the Australian National University: the Lapita had mastered the advanced art of sailing against the wind.
13.Throughout prehistory, it was the fact that producers and consumers were either one and the same individuals or close kin that guaranteed the highest degree of reliability and durability in manufactured items.
14.If we go back a way in history and prehistory knowledge of yourself probably wasn’t that important because people did what their parents or grandparents did whether they were hunters or fisherman or craftspeople.
15.Bruce says, " The point" – once again, the reason – " is to learn more about the peoples of ancient civilizations who lived here in prehistory." " Ancient" (ancient) means very old, usually thousands of years old.