Three-million-year-old tools found in Kenya reveal early humans' ability to cut food, butcher meat, and adapt to new diets.
An international study reveals how early humans, as far back as 1.5 million years ago, deliberately selected specific stones ...
Kenya’s Homa peninsula is home to several artifacts of early humanity, most notably the remains of Lucy, a being with mixed ...
The capacity might explain how Homo erectus conquered Eurasia, but deepens the mystery about what took our own species so ...
Since Shiyan sits on a treasure trove of relics related to their origins, evolution and development of mankind, experts say ...
Over a million years ago, Homo erectus demonstrated remarkable adaptability by thriving in harsh desert environments, ...
A study of tool use among chimps, our closest living relatives, has cast light on the human evolutionary journey.
A study of prehistoric stone tools has suggested that a group of early humans ate a surprisingly diverse range of plant foods.
Analysis of basalt tools from the Hula Valley shows that Stone Age humans gathered, extracted and crushed starches from ...
Our early human ancestors had a much greater adaptability to survive in extreme environments than previously thought ...
Explore the remarkable survival strategies of Homo erectus in extreme desert conditions. Discover how they thrived in harsh environments one million years ago.