Human remains found inside a Belgian cave tell a grisly story of selective cannibalism among our hominid cousins.
How far back in evolutionary history does kissing go? Through phylogenetic analysis, an international team of scientists ...
Human faces are famously flatter than those of other primates. Neanderthals, by contrast, had prominent, projecting midfaces ...
With the help of newly identified bones, an enigmatic 3.4-million-year-old hominin foot found in 2009, is assigned to a ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists found a new human species that defies expectations
When researchers in China announced a possible new human species from a cave in Hebei province, they did more than add ...
Dogs evolved from gray wolves, but scientists debate exactly where, when and how many times dogs were domesticated. Ancient DNA evidence suggests that domestication happened twice, in eastern and ...
Evidence from a prehistoric cave system indicates non-ritualistic cannibalism of Neanderthal women and children.
A new study from Oxford University shows that humans and Neanderthals most likely kissed each other back in the distant past.
Take a look back at Joe Keery, Natalia Dyer, Maya Hawke, Joseph Quinn and David Harbour reading, confirming and denying ...
Subtle genomic variations between humans and Neanderthals provide clues to how DNA shapes our facial features.
The first kiss in history probably took place over 16.9 million years ago — long before humans even existed, a new study suggests.
Kissing stretches back roughly 21 million years, to the shared ancestor of humans and other large apes, according to the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results