A child's tooth and strange green stones uncover a 5,500-year-old mystery
An ancient mountain cave in the Pyrenees may have served as one of the earliest high-altitude mining camps ever discovered, with evidence of repeated visits spanning thousands of years. The find becomes even more intriguing with the discovery of a childโs remains and clues that d
An ancient mountain cave in the Pyrenees may have served as one of the earliest high-altitude mining camps ever discovered, with evidence of repeated visits spanning thousands of years. The find becomes even more intriguing with the discovery of a childโs remains and clues that deeper excavations could uncover prehistoric burials.
This report comes from ScienceDaily. The story centres on A child's tooth and strange green stones uncover a 5,500-year-old mystery. Full coverage and background context is available at the original source. Readers seeking more detail on this developing topic are encouraged to follow updates from ScienceDaily and related outlets covering this beat.

