Anthropology
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AnthropologyModern-day trackers reinterpret Stone Age cave footprints
African trackers help researchers interpret ancient human footprints in French caves.
By Bruce Bower -
AnthropologyHuman laugh lines traced back to ape ancestors
Chimps make laughing faces that speak to evolution of human ha-ha’s.
By Bruce Bower -
ArchaeologyBronze Age humans racked up travel miles
A new study indicates long journeys and unexpected genetic links in Bronze Age Eurasian cultures.
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AnthropologyChimps prefer roasted potatoes, hinting at origins of cooking
Chimps really dig roasted potatoes, suggesting cooking arose millions of years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
AnthropologyDouble blow to skull is earliest evidence of murder, a 430,000-year-old whodunit
A 430,000-year-old hominid skull shows signs of murder, making it the earliest suspected homicide.
By Julia Rosen -
HumansFossils suggest another hominid species lived near Lucy
Fossil jaws dating to over 3 million years ago may add a new species to the ancient hominid mix.
By Bruce Bower -
ArchaeologyEarliest known stone tools unearthed in Kenya
East African discoveries suggest stone-tool making started at least 3.3 million years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
AnthropologyPots from hunter-gatherer site in China tell tale of lifestyle shift
Chinese foragers settled down and made pottery shortly before farming’s ascent.
By Bruce Bower -
AnthropologyRitual cannibalism occurred in England 14,700 years ago
Human bones show signs of ritual cannibalism in England 14,700 years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
GeneticsMummies tell tuberculosis tales from the crypt
Hungarian mummies contracted multiple strains of tuberculosis at the same time, researchers find.
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AnthropologyBeads suggest culture blocked farming in Northern Europe
Baltic hunter-gatherers blocked farming’s spread from south.
By Bruce Bower