Fossilized bones and teeth dating to 773,000 years ago unearthed in a Moroccan cave are providing a deeper understanding of ...
A series of 773,000-year-old human remains in Morocco may represent a population of hominins that lived just as our own ...
A collection of bones from Casablanca holds important new clues to the origins of modern humans and Neanderthals.
Where did our species first emerge?This sparked a contentious debate about whether our species originally emerged outside of Africa, before returning there.
For decades, anthropologists lumped these ancient populations into a single species, Homo heidelbergensis, long believed to ...
The analysis of dental remains from Dmanisi in the Republic of Georgia has important implications regarding the balance and ...
Our ancestor Homo erectus was able to survive punishingly hot and dry desert more than a million years ago, according to a new study that casts doubt on the idea that Homo sapiens were the first ...
Fossilized bones and teeth dating back 773,000 years, discovered in Morocco, provide insight into early human evolution.
An international research team reports the analysis of new hominin fossils from the site of Thomas Quarry I (Casablanca, ...
The fragmentary facial bones belong to Homo affinis erectus, an esoteric offshoot of our family tree that inhabited Spain more than one million years ago. A new study challenges the notion that ...
(Reuters) - Scientists have unearthed in Spain fossilized facial bones roughly 1.1 million to 1.4 million years old that may represent a previously unknown species in the human evolutionary lineage - ...
Well if there's one thing genomic analysis has taught us, it's that no hominid is ever really gone. Seriously though. We've got, what, two Denisovan sites and there is already evidence for possible ...