A study of prehistoric stone tools has suggested that a group of early humans ate a surprisingly diverse range of plant foods.
A study of tool use among chimps, our closest living relatives, has cast light on the human evolutionary journey.
An international study reveals how early humans, as far back as 1.5 million years ago, deliberately selected specific stones ...
A new archaeological study, conducted along the Jordan River banks south of northern Israel’s Hula Valley, offers a fresh ...
Research uncovers early humans' reliance on plant-based foods, revealing ancient tools and 780,000-year-old starch grains.
Cavemen have long been portrayed as voracious meat eaters. But in their new study, the team set out to understand what early humans truly ate. The researchers focused on basalt tools found at ...
Analysis of basalt tools from the Hula Valley shows that Stone Age humans gathered, extracted and crushed starches from ...
In the study, Israeli scientists assessed starch ... also offers insights into the social and cognitive behaviours of early humans. “This discovery underscores the importance of plant foods ...
A study published in PLOS ONE investigates how early hominins in Ethiopia, between 1.6- 1.0 million years ago, selected rocks ...
Scientists have recently uncovered food remnants that provide interesting insights into the diets of early ancestors.As per ...
Researchers developed a more precise method of understanding ancestry from ancient DNA and used it to identify previously ...