For decades, the narrative of early humans evolution has been closely tied to the rise of meat consumption, thought to have ...
New research shows Australopithecus ate mostly plants, challenging theories about early human diets, meat, and evolution.
Explore the remarkable survival strategies of Homo erectus in extreme desert conditions. Discover how they thrived in harsh ...
Three-million-year-old tools found in Kenya reveal early humans' ability to cut food, butcher meat, and adapt to new diets.
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.
Homo erectus was able to adapt to and survive in desert-like environments at least 1.2 million years ago, according to a paper published in Communications Earth & ...
12, 2024 — Few genomes have been sequenced from early modern humans, who first arrived in ... A Long Childhood Is the Prelude to the Evolution of a Large Brain Nov. 13, 2024 — Could social ...
Chemicals in the tooth enamel of Australopithecus suggest the early human ancestors ate very little meat, dining on vegetation instead.
New research using climate models provides fascinating insights into how environmental conditions influenced the evolution ...
A new study indicates that human behavior around 45,000 to 29,000 years ago contributed to a change in the composition of ...