“I was looking around and I saw this shiny flint rock. I just thought it looked different to all the other different pebbles ...
A nine-year-old boy named Ben Witten was recently studying the Stone Age exhibit at the Worthing Museum in southern England ...
Ben Witten found an unusual rock on an English beach when he was 6. It turned out to be an exceedingly rare hand ax made by Neanderthals, tens of thousands of years ...
The boy, Ben Witten, brought his find to the museum, where experts concluded it was a Neanderthal hand ax—carved by an ...
LOWER PAXTON TOWNSHIP, Pa. (WHTM) — Lower Paxton Township recognized a 102-year-old Marine veteran today. Bess Gorelick of ...
A young boy's finding is now on display at the Worthing Museum in England. His accidental discovery turned out to be an ...
According to the BBC, Ben Witten, who is from West Sussex, England, found the ancient hand axe at Shoreham Beach when he was ...
The boy, Ben Witten, brought his find to the museum, where experts concluded it was a Neanderthal hand ax—carved by an extinct group of humans between 40,000 and 60,000 years ago. Many similar ...
The boy — identified by Worthing Museum as Ben Witten, now 9 years old — discovered a shiny rock at Shoreham Beach in Sussex. "I was looking around and I saw this shiny flint rock. I just ...