Three-million-year-old tools found in Kenya reveal early humans' ability to cut food, butcher meat, and adapt to new diets.
An international study reveals how early humans, as far back as 1.5 million years ago, deliberately selected specific stones ...
Kenya’s Homa peninsula is home to several artifacts of early humanity, most notably the remains of Lucy, a being with mixed ...
Since Shiyan sits on a treasure trove of relics related to their origins, evolution and development of mankind, experts say ...
A study of prehistoric stone tools has suggested that a group of early humans ate a surprisingly diverse range of plant foods.
A study published in PLOS ONE investigates how early hominins in Ethiopia, between 1.6- 1.0 million years ago, selected rocks ...
Modern chimpanzees select rock tools in similar ways to Oldowan hominins, early humans who used stone tools that date back to ...
A study of tool use among chimps, our closest living relatives, has cast light on the human evolutionary journey.
Research uncovers early humans' reliance on plant-based foods, revealing ancient tools and 780,000-year-old starch grains.
New research reveals chimpanzees' thoughtful tool selection mirrors ancient human ancestors' behaviours, offering a glimpse into humanity's distant past and shared evolutionary roots in tool-making.