For tens of thousands of years, two species — Neanderthals and anatomically modern humans — shared vast landscapes.
Fossils offer a detailed record of early human skulls but not the brains inside them. So researchers have been using genetic material taken from those fossils to search for clues about how the human ...
For a brief time in history, humans and Neanderthals shared the Earth, swapping DNA, but the details of that swapping might ...
A study incorporating new DNA data and archaeological evidence has shown that the last Neanderthals in Europe experienced a ...
A study incorporating fresh DNA data and archaeological evidence has revealed that the last Neanderthals in Europe experienced a massive population turnover. The research shows that late Neanderthals ...
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How our ancestors out-organized Neanderthals in their homes
In recent years, there have been numerous studies that compare anatomically modern humans – our direct ancestors – to other ...
Edited volume of papers from a conference of the same name held at New York University, Jan. 27-29, 2005. Contents Neanderthals revisited / K. Harvati and T. Harrison -- The distinctiveness and ...
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