Anthropology
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyHuman smarts got a surprisingly early startHuman ingenuity began on treks across Asia and in fluctuating African habitats. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Humans Humans‘Little Foot’ skeleton analysis reignites debate over the hominid’s speciesLong-awaited analyses of the Little Foot skeleton have researchers disagreeing over resurrecting a defunct species name. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Genetics GeneticsA 5,000-year-old mass grave harbors the oldest plague bacteria ever foundDNA from an ancient strain of the plague-causing bacterium could help uncover the origins of the deadly disease. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Archaeology ArchaeologyA Bronze Age game called 58 holes was found chiseled into stone in AzerbaijanA newly discovered rock pattern suggests that the game traveled fast from the Near East to Eurasia thousands of years ago. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologySkull damage suggests Neandertals led no more violent lives than humansNeandertals’ skulls suggest they didn’t lead especially injury-prone lives. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyNeandertal teeth reveal the earliest known signs of lead exposureChemical analyses of teeth from young Neandertals show that lead exposure in hominids goes back some 250,000 years. 
- 			 Archaeology ArchaeologyPeople in the Pacific Northwest smoked tobacco long before Europeans showed upAncient indigenous groups in the Pacific Northwest used tobacco roughly 600 years before European settlers ventured west with the plant. 
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyThe way hunter-gatherers share food shows how cooperation evolvedCamp customs override selfishness and generosity when foragers divvy up food, a study of East Africa’s Hazda hunter-gatherers shows. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyButchered bird bones put humans in Madagascar 10,500 years agoHumans reached the island near Africa 6,000 years earlier than thought, raising questions about how its megafauna went extinct. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Genetics GeneticsGerman skeletons hint that medieval warrior groups recruited from afarGraveyard finds may come from an ancient European warrior household with political pull. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyA fossil mistaken for a bat may shake up lemurs’ evolutionary historyOn Madagascar, a type of lemur called aye-ayes may have a singular evolutionary history. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Archaeology ArchaeologyThe debate over people’s pathway into the Americas heats upDefenders of an ice-free inland passage for early Americans make their case. By Bruce Bower