Morning Overview on MSN
We may now know where humans and Neanderthals hooked up — and it was all over the place
Somewhere around 47,000 years ago, in mountain valleys and along migration corridors stretching from Iran to central Europe, ...
A reconstruction of a Neanderthal man in the human evolution exhibit at London’s Natural History Museum in January 2024. - Mike Kemp/In Pictures/In Pictures via Getty Images The 2010 discovery that ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Neanderthals used rhinoceros teeth as hammers to sculpt stone tools: Study
A new study has revealed another remarkable aspect of Neanderthal behavior: they not only ...
BBC Wildlife on MSN
"They wore clothes, wielded fire, and created art; they may have even been smarter than us..." Just who were our closest cousins?
From ice-age hunters to our closest extinct relatives, this essential guide uncovers who the Neanderthals really were — and what they reveal about us.
Researchers examining the brains of living people found that they differed more substantially than Neanderthals' brains ...
Homo sapiens’ interconnected networks gave them a survival edge over more isolated Neanderthals amid environmental changes.
University of Iowa researchers discovered human predecessors, previously thought to not be verbal, have parts of human DNA ...
A new study has revealed that Neanderthals possessed an unexpected and highly durable tool in their kits: the teeth of prehistoric rhinoceroses. Marks found on fossilized rhino teeth discovered in ...
Most people today have a little Neanderthal DNA sprinkled through their genome. These genomic signals are the telltale signs that overlapping populations of ancient anatomically modern humans and ...
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