Early human cultures likely used stones as spindle whorls to spin fibers into yarn. A collection of perforated pebbles discovered at an archaeological site in Israel may be spindle whorls, marking a ...
When faced with an assortment of 12,000-year-old perforated pebbles from an archaeological site in northern Israel, ...
They’re literally reinventing the wheel. Scientists might be closer to learning who invented the wheel after discovering ...
A collection of perforated pebbles from an archaeological site in Israel may be spindle whorls, representing a key milestone in the development of rotational tools including wheels, according to a new ...
Cornell researchers have developed an elegant and sustainable way to clean up waterways: reusing one waste product to remove ...
A 12,000-year-old tool used to spin fibers into yarn has been identified in an archaeological dig in northern Israel, ...
Well-cared for and "happy" sheep make the best wool, yarn experts who use rare-breeds have said. Becci and Markus Pamely-Bast ...
The stones studied by the team predate the cart wheels of the Bronze Age by thousands of years, highlighting a key milestone ...
Spindle whorls, round, weighted objects that are attached to a spindle stick, form a similar wheel-and-axle-like device to help the spindle rotate faster and longer, enabling it to efficiently gather ...
Israeli archeologists use models based on their find to spin flax into yarn, indicating these pebbles were used as a version ...
A collection of perforated pebbles from an archaeological site in Israel may be spindle whorls, representing a key milestone in the development of ...
When connected, they form a rudimentary wheel-and-axle mechanism that can spin fibers like wool or flax into yarn more ...