Archaeologists excavating at Tadım Fortress and Höyük in eastern Turkey have unearthed a remarkable stone seal dating back 7,500 years, pushing evidence of organized settlement in the Elazig region ...
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Homo erectus wasn't the first human species to leave Africa 1.8 million years ago, fossils suggest
A new analysis of enigmatic skulls from the Republic of Georgia suggest that Homo erectus wasn't the only human species to ...
Scientists may have cracked the case of whether a seven-million-year-old fossil could walk upright. A new study found strong ...
It has been said that the first sign of civilization was a healed broken bone found in an ancient human skeleton — meaning ...
Researchers have reconstructed ancient herpesvirus genomes from Iron Age and medieval Europeans, revealing that HHV-6 has ...
Evidence suggests ancient hunter-gatherers performed the first ever African cremation of a female sometime around 9,500 years ...
History is woven from stories, and vivid individuals are the protagonists of these tales. Alongside the event "Hangzhou, a ...
R.Evolution unveils Eywa Way of Water, a water-front residence in the heart of Dubai that redefines ultra‑luxury living ...
The textbook version of the "Out of Africa" hypothesis holds that the first human species to leave the continent around 1.8 million years ago was Homo erectus. But in recent years, a debate has ...
Archaeologists are examining bones at Çayönü Hill in the Ergani district of Diyarbakır, southeastern Türkiye, to reveal ...
It's no secret that humans are the Earth's most dominant species. And, without proof of life anywhere else in the Universe, we can probably consider ourselves the most dominant species in space too.
A team of international scientists, led by Dr. Karen Baab, a paleoanthropologist at the College of Graduate Studies, Glendale Campus of Midwestern University in Arizona, produced a virtual ...
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