Three-million-year-old tools found in Kenya reveal early humans' ability to cut food, butcher meat, and adapt to new diets.
An early human ancestor of our species successfully navigated harsher and more arid terrains for longer in Eastern Africa ...
Researchers have innovatively merged protein structural data with genetic sequences to construct evolutionary trees, revealing deep-rooted relationships among species with enhanced accuracy. This ...
Our ancestor Homo erectus was able to survive punishingly hot and dry desert more than a million years ago, according to a ...
Our early human ancestors might have been more adaptable than previously thought: New research suggests Homo erectus was able ...
A new study revealed that our ancestor Homo erectus survived extreme desert conditions over a million years ago, challenging ...
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 more than 3 million ... the most ...
Published in the Journal of Astrobiology, the paper does not argue that there was a technologically advanced species long ...
An early human ancestor of our species successfully navigated harsher and more arid terrains for longer in Eastern Africa than previously thought ...
Archaeologists from Washington even believe the Garden of Eden could be a real place where civilisation began.