EarlyHumans on MSN
How the first domesticated animals transformed human history
Thousands of years ago, humans began a revolutionary process that would change civilization forever — animal domestication.
A senior at Bayside Academy has officially made school history. Noah Breeland recently won the 215 lb division at the AHSAA ...
As the legal debate continues over the Aravalli hills, emerging archaeological evidence from the Delhi-Faridabad region offers a powerful reminder of what truly is at stake.
5don MSN
Did the first human ancestor originate in the Balkans? New fossil shows evidence of bipedalism
Walking on two legs has long been considered a milestone in human evolution and one of our most defining characteristics.
According to a statement released by the University of Tübingen, an international team of researchers who evaluated a fossil femur unearthed at the site of Azmaka in southern Bulgaria suggests that it ...
Tiny fossil teeth from Colorado are revealing new clues about the very first relatives of primates, including humans.
2don MSN
Digital reconstruction reveals the face of ‘Little Foot,’ a nearly 4 million-year-old human ancestor
Little Foot, a 3.67 million-year-old human ancestor, is getting a digital facial reconstruction after her skull was crushed in a cave.
The first installment of a gripping new trilogy blends high-concept science fiction with global conspiracy and ancient ...
When it’s time to pick a number, do you trust experience or a device? A look at when each earns your confidence.
Mosquitoes may have started targeting humans millions of years ago, possibly during the spread of Homo erectus in Southeast Asia.
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
38,900-year-old evidence pushes back the first humans in North America
The oldest widely accepted evidence for human activity in North America is presented through mammoth bones from New Mexico’s Rio Puerco Canyon dated between 36,250 and 38,900 years ago. Additional ...
A new study suggests that the deadly insects evolved their taste for human blood much earlier than previously thought, around when Homo erectus migrated into Southeast Asia ...
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