Modern Humans and Neanderthals Are Connected! Ancient Mongolian Skull Reveals Stunning Link Deep within Mongolia’s Salkhit Valley, a lone skullcap has baffled scientists for years. Originally thought ...
The more we discover about our species' family tree, the harder it becomes to pinpoint when exactly Homo sapiens emerged, ...
However, humans will go extinct at some time, because extinction is what happens to all species. However, there are signs that humans will go extinct soon, in geological terms. In The Decline and Fall ...
In February 1925, Nature published 1 a paper by Raymond Dart, an anthropologist who spent most of his working life describing the first hominin fossil to ... to our genus, Homo, says Lauren ...
1928: Ancient human fossils are discovered in Zhoukoudian, China, believed to be a new species of man, now known as Homo erectus On the last day of my internship at the Cincinnati Business Courier ...
Back then, many paleoanthropologists thought that present-day human populations evolved regionally from archaic hominins such as Homo erectus ... "Prematurely splitting fossils into species could ...
A local amateur fossil hunter made the find on the Cliffs of Stevns, a UNESCO-listed site south of Copenhagen. While out on a walk, Peter Bennicke found some unusual fragments, which turned out to ...
China's power demand to rise 6-7.5% in 2025, analysts say Rapid renewable roll out could meet extra demand, analysts say Thermal power forecasts vary from small fall to up 4.5% Advanced ...
The fossil was first found in the quarry pit at Swindon Brick and Tile Company in 1874, a site now occupied by Halford's and The Range on Fleming Way. While most of the Swindon Stegosaur remains ...
Discoveries in the past two decades have added new branches to the human family tree, including species such as the hobbit-like Homo floresiensis ... of humanlike fossils that have defied ...
“Prematurely splitting fossils into species could obscure the real story of what is going ... regionally from archaic hominins such as Homo erectus, which left Africa about 2 million years ...