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Agriculture turned us into couch potatoes | The Times

www.thetimes.co.uk
Ever since the arrival of agriculture, our legs have been getting weaker, according to an analysis of skeletons over the last 7,000 years

Prehistoric Women Had More Arm Strength Than Competitive Rowers Today...

time.com
According to a new study, women who lived during the first 6,000 years of farming had stronger upper arms than modern-day female rowers.

'7,000 years' of couch potatoes | London Evening Standard | Evening...

www.standard.co.uk
Couch potatoes have a history that stretches back 7,000 years to when humans first picked up the plough, a study has shown.

Why prehistoric women would beat Cambridge students in a fight -...

www.cambridge-news.co.uk
University scientists have found that prehistoric women had stronger bones than today's female rowing crew

How far our fitness has fallen – Our Communities

www.winnipegfreepress.com
Breaking News, Sports, Manitoba, Canada

NZZ: Jungsteinzeit-Frauen waren kräftiger als heutige Ruderinnen | NZZ

Frauen in der Jungsteinzeit hatten im Schnitt trainiertere Oberarme als heutige, ambitionierte Ruderinnen. Das ergab eine Vergleichsstudie zwischen rund

Prehistoric women were stronger than elite Cambridge rowers, study...

www.telegraph.co.uk
The notion of a bucolic past where our ancestors toiled contentedly in the fields may need to be revised after a new study showed just how hard prehistoric...

What time is Shetland on BBC1 tonight? - Jane Simon - Mirror Online

www.mirror.co.uk
It’s a delight watching Perez as he works his way through the case - he’s like The Killing’s Sarah Lund in male form, albeit without the benefit of any...

Prehistoric women were stronger than modern rowers, say Cambridge...

www.independent.co.uk
Cambridge scientists have found their own legendary rowing team would have been outclassed by prehistoric women when it came to upper body strength. To examine...

Shetland star Steven Robertson on fighting crime on the island he...

www.heraldscotland.com
STEVEN Robertson offers an insight into his life when he says he’s talking from a mobile while sitting in his car outside his Hertfordshire home.…

UVic news - University of Victoria

www.uvic.ca
Physical exercise is known to make bones stronger but according to a new study, maternal health and its impact on the pace of a girl's development can also...

Wehe, du legst dich mit Wilma Feuerstein an - Hamburger Abendblatt

www.abendblatt.de
Überraschende Entdeckung im Hüninnengrab. Frauen waren in der Steinzeit das starke Geschlecht

Evolution: Früher waren die Frauen 30 Prozent stärker - WELT

www.welt.de
Die Frauen-Rudermannschaft der Uni Cambridge ist stark. Gerade erst stellte sie einen neuen Rekord auf. Doch mit ihren Vorfahrinnen vor Jahren können auch...

Bones show prehistoric women's intensive manu | EurekAlert!

www.eurekalert.org
Comparisons of bone strength between prehistoric women and living female athletes demonstrate that prehistoric women performed rigorous manual labor for...

From farming to sedentary lifestyles - how 6,000 years has...

www.ancient-origins.net
New research conducted by the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge University, has examined human bones over the course of 6,000 years to...

From athletes to couch potatoes: humans through 6,000 years of...

www.cam.ac.uk
Human bones are remarkably plastic and respond surprisingly quickly to change. Put under stress through physical exertion – such as long-distance walking or

Parrott returns after flight of fancy - Birmingham Livewww.birminghammail.co.uk › news

www.birminghammail.co.uk
... her out as normal and she'd been sitting on my shoulder when the front door opened and she flew straight out," said owner Alison Macintosh.

Montgomery Advertiser

eu.montgomeryadvertiser.com
It does not matter how fit you are. You're slackers. Not strong. Pathetic. Latest research shows human fitness has decreased so dramatically in

Science Live - Bones – imaging prehistoric and modern women

sciencelive.net
Connecting event organisers, volunteers and speakers to put on live science events.

Steinzeit-Bizeps: Urzeitfrauen waren kräftiger als heutige...

www.watson.ch
Frauen in der Jungsteinzeit hatten laut einer Vergleichsstudie im Schnitt kräftigere Oberarme als heutige Elite-Ruderinnen.

Stone Age women were tough mothers

cosmosmagazine.com
New analysis reveals impressive arm strength in early field workers. Andrew Masterson reports.

Superstrong Prehistoric Women Were Responsible for the Biggest Shift...

www.newsweek.com
Neolithic women have not been given enough credit, researchers said.
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