How old is the human race? Age of Homo sapiens causes conflict with scientists0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- October 29, 2019
One report says 200,000 years while another stated 300,000
One report says 200,000 years while another stated 300,000
Unprecedented feat reveals little-known Denisovans resembled Neanderthals but had ‘super-wide’ skulls
Rediscovery of missing finger bone shows slender fingertips unlike knobbed Neanderthal finger bones
What lengths would you go to if your survival truly depended upon it?
In an evening lecture titled ‘Humans and Monkeys in Java 12,000 Years Ago’ hosted by the French Institute of Indonesia (IFI), Ingicco details an interesting finding from the Song Terus cave in Pacitan regency, East Java.
Scientists have identified the earliest known evidence of modern humans outside of the African continent.
There’s less than a 1% chance Australopithecus sediba led to the genus Homo.
The first humans who settled in Scandinavia more than 10,000 years ago left their DNA behind in ancient chewing gum, masticated lumps made from birch bark pitch. This is shown in a new study conducted at Stockholm University and published in Communications Biology.
About 14,000 years ago, a party of five barefoot people — two adults, one preteen and two children — walked and even crawled through a dark passageway in a cave, according to a new study that analyzed the hand- and footprints these individuals left behind.
A 15,600-year old footprint discovered in southern Chile is believed to be the oldest ever found in the Americas, according to researchers.