Chemicals in the tooth enamel of Australopithecus suggest the early human ancestors ate very little meat, dining on vegetation instead.
Analyzing the chemistry of some ancient teeth has revealed what human ancestors were eating around 3 million years ago.
Learn more about how Homo erectus may have adapted to dryer, arid conditions before Homo sapiens.
A long-standing question about when archaic members of the genus Homo adapted to harsh environments such as deserts and rainforests has been answered in a new research paper.
More than 1.2 million years ago, our ancestors Homo erectus developed the tools and intellectual capacity to survive in very ...
Our early human ancestors had a much greater adaptability to survive in extreme environments than previously thought ...
Three-million-year-old tools found in Kenya reveal early humans' ability to cut food, butcher meat, and adapt to new diets.
A study of tool use among chimps, our closest living relatives, has cast light on the human evolutionary journey.
September 2025 - 9 days for £5,395 per person. Embark on a captivating journey through time as you explore key Neanderthal ...
A study published in the Journal of Human Evolution found that chimpanzees select harder stones for nut-cracking tasks, ...
Lucy, an early human ancestor, could run upright but much slower than modern humans. New simulations show that muscle and ...