Ancient DNA from nearly 16,000 genomes suggests human evolution accelerated after farming, cities, and the Bronze Age transformed Europe.
A new study of wrist bones suggests human ancestors may have shared a knuckle-walking past with chimpanzees and gorillas.
Malaria may have shaped early human life across Africa far earlier than once thought, steering where people could safely live ...
No matter where you are in the world, the humans living there are about 90 percent right-handed while the remaining 10 ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists found a one-meter rock in South Africa, inside was a near-complete human ancestor skeleton
A rock sitting quietly in a university lab turned out to contain something far more remarkable than anyone realized: what may ...
Dagens.com on MSN
Potatoes may have changed human evolution in the Andes
Food has shaped human history in more ways than most people realize. Over thousands of years, they may also have changed the human body itself. A new study now suggests that potatoes may have played ...
Even tiny muscles around the ears hint at our evolutionary past. In many mammals, tiny ear muscles allow the outer ear (pinna ...
Brain size and bipedalism are the most likely drivers of our species’ right-hand dominance, according to new research ...
A groundbreaking archaeological discovery in West Africa is challenging long-held assumptions about early human adaptability and migration. Evidence from a site in Côte d'Ivoire reveals that Homo ...
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