Homo Erectus, Not Sapiens, 1st Humans To Survive Desert

Three-million-year-old tools found in Kenya reveal early humans' ability to cut food, butcher meat, and adapt to new diets.
Published in the Journal of Astrobiology, the paper does not argue that there was a technologically advanced species long ...
Chemicals in the tooth enamel of Australopithecus suggest the early human ancestors ate very little meat, dining on vegetation instead.
Human ancestors like Australopithecus -- which lived around 3.5 million years ago in southern Africa -- ate very little to no meat, according to new research. This conclusion comes from an analysis of ...
The incorporation of meat into the diet was a milestone for the human evolutionary lineage, a potential catalyst for advances ...
An early human ancestor of our species successfully navigated harsher and more arid terrains for longer in Eastern Africa ...
The blades are believed to be some of the first tools ever used on Earth — and even after ... innovation that ever ...