Imagine early humans meticulously crafting stone tools for nearly 300,000 years, all while contending with recurring ...
Genetic tweaks allowed early humans to stand, balance and walk on two legs instead of moving on all fours like other primates ...
A new AI study finds leopards hunted early humans in East Africa, challenging long-held ideas about when our ancestors became ...
The very first humans millions of years ago may have been inventors, according to a discovery in northwest Kenya. Researchers ...
Language has enabled humans to innovate, communicate, and thrive globally, with over 7,000 languages spoken today and ...
New research reveals that scavenging may have helped early humans adapt, expand, and endure tough seasons through smart use ...
New evidence from South China reveals how early humans adapted to environmental transformations during the Late Pleistocene.
We now have only the second high-quality genome from an ancient Denisovan human, which reveals there were more populations of ...
Two small genetic changes reshaped the human pelvis, setting our early ancestors on the path to upright walking, scientists say.
In this 4.4-million-year-old skeleton, scientists may have found the missing step between climbing and walking.
An Unseen Threat Picture this: you're walking down a dimly lit street at night, and every shadow seems to move. Your heart rate quickens, your muscles tense, and suddenly you're scanning every corner ...
The role of megafaunal exploitation in early human evolution remains debated. Occasional use of large carcasses by early hominins has been considered by some as opportunistic, possibly a fallback ...