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Anthropologist Adam Gordon used multivariate resampling on fragmentary fossils to uncover size gaps that hint at intense male competition in early hominids.
When palaeoanthropologist Donald Johanson discovered a bone fragment at the Hadar fossil site in Ethiopia in 1974, he knew it ...
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IFLScience on MSNPrehistoric Humans Began Eating Tubers 700,000 Years Before Our Teeth Evolved To Do SoAround 2.3 million years ago, ancient human species such as Homo rudolfensis and Homo erectus suddenly changed their diets.
As early humans spread from lush African forests into grasslands, their need for ready sources of energy led them to develop a taste for grassy plants, especially grains and the starchy plant tissue ...
Australopithecus afarensis (left), Homo rudolfensis (center), and Homo ergaster (right) evolved different dental structures to suit their shifting diets.
New research reveals extreme size differences between male and female early human ancestors.
A new study reveals that some of our earliest human ancestors showed extreme differences in body size between males and ...
A newly published study has found that males of some of our earliest known ancestors were significantly larger than females.
Lucy, a 3.2 million old fossil skeleton of a human ancestor of Ethiopia, is set to be displayed in Europe for the first time; ...
The National Museum of Natural History’s Hall of Human Origins vastly distorts the scientific evidence on human evolution, ...
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