Human Evolution
Archaeologists have uncovered evidence that early humans produced sophisticated stone tools in central China during a brutal ice age 146,000 years ago. The findings come from the Lingjing site and challenge previous assumptions about when human creativity emerged.
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A new analysis of the best-preserved Neanderthal infant skeleton shows that these ancient babies developed bones and brains at a pace matching modern humans aged 12 to 14 months, despite being only about six months old. The findings, based on the Amud 7 infant from Israel, suggest Neanderthals grew rapidly in early childhood as an adaptation to harsh environments. Researchers observed similar patterns in other young Neanderthal remains.
A 2.6-million-year-old jawbone discovered in Ethiopia's Afar region marks the first known fossil of the robust hominin Paranthropus from that area. Found about 1,000 kilometers north of previous sites, the specimen suggests this early human relative was more adaptable and widespread than previously thought. Led by University of Chicago paleoanthropologist Zeresenay Alemseged, the discovery challenges long-held views on hominin competition and evolution.
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A University of Cambridge study ranks humans among the most monogamous mammals, closer to beavers and meerkats than to chimpanzees. By analyzing sibling ratios across species and human societies, researchers found that long-term pair bonding is unusually prevalent in our species. Even in cultures allowing polygamy, human monogamy exceeds that of most other mammals.
DNA study supports human arrival in Australia 60,000 years ago
mandag d. 9. marts 2026, 20.20Bulgarian femur hints at early bipedal apes in Europe
fredag d. 27. februar 2026, 00.15Study indicates male Neanderthals fathered most human-Neanderthal offspring
onsdag d. 25. februar 2026, 02.47Study uncovers 40,000-year-old signs as early information systems
torsdag d. 19. februar 2026, 16.55Drought linked to extinction of homo floresiensis 61,000 years ago
onsdag d. 21. januar 2026, 08.46Oldest known rock art is 68,000-year-old hand stencil in Indonesia
onsdag d. 21. januar 2026, 03.12Fossil find expands known range of ancient hominin Paranthropus
onsdag d. 7. januar 2026, 10.20Moroccan fossils may link to early human ancestors
onsdag d. 10. december 2025, 20.10Oldest evidence of fire-making discovered in ancient Britain
søndag d. 7. december 2025, 09.11Ancient genomes reshape understanding of human evolution in southern Africa