Until now, at least 14 different species have been assigned to the genus Homo since it emerged in Ethiopia some 2.8 million ...
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Live Science on MSNNeanderthals, modern humans and a mysterious human lineage mingled in caves in ancient Israel, study findsA newly excavated cave in Israel holds burials and artifacts suggesting that multiple human species commingled and shared ...
It is a deep question, from deep in our history: when did human language as we know it emerge? A new survey of genomic ...
Fragments of a partial skull unearthed in a cave in northern Spain have revealed a previously unknown population of ancient ...
The first-ever published research out of Tinshemet Cave indicates the two human species regularly interacted and shared ...
The climate and early human societies were changing quickly during the fall of our closest evolutionary relative—and are big clues to the causes of their demise.
Few people could write so genially, even humorously, about our existential crisis. Henry Gee can, in his excellent new book ...
In this picture, our parent species is equivalent to our biological parents, and the birth of H. sapiens becomes an event that is as easy to define as our own birth. But speciation isn’t really ...
Many known hominin fossils defy species classification, with the most famous example being the ever-enigmatic Denisovans. A ...
Live Science on MSN23d
'Speech gene' seen only in modern humans may have helped us evolve to talkBut what could this tell us about how spoken language first appeared in H. sapiens? Modern humans have a unique version of NOVA1 compared with other species, including our extinct human relatives, the ...
The new findings also strengthen an argument that H. sapiens evolved roughly 300,000 years ago via mating among populations based in different African regions and habitats, including West Africa ...
Our human evolution expert Professor Chris Stringer, who has been studying Neanderthals and Homo sapiens for about 50 years, tackles the big question of whether we belong to the same species. Everyone ...
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