Fossils unearthed in Morocco are the first from a little-understood period of human evolution and may be remains of a ...
A trio of jawbones, a leg bone, and a handful of vertebrae and teeth found in Morocco may represent one of the last common ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
2-Million-Year-Old Fossil May Be The Oldest Example of an Early Human
The 2-million-year-old partial skeleton may even represent the oldest example of H. habilis discovered so far. It includes a ...
ZME Science on MSN
These 773,000-year-old hominin fossils from Morocco may be the closest ancestors of modern humans
This cave was probably a death trap. Nearly 800,000 years ago, carnivores dragged prey into a hollow carved into coastal rock near what is now Casablanca, Morocco. Hyenas regularly gnawed bones there.
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
New fossil discovery could kick Lucy out of the human family tree
A fossilized foot discovered in Ethiopia and left unclassified for over a decade has now been linked to a little-known human ...
The jawbones and vertebrae of a hominin that lived 773,000 years ago have been found in North Africa and could represent a ...
Ancient fossils from Moroccan caves, dated with rare precision, offer rare insight into early human evolution.
Jawbones and other remains, similar to specimens found in Europe, were dated to 773,000 years and help close a gap in ...
Live Science on MSN
Homo erectus wasn't the first human species to leave Africa 1.8 million years ago, fossils suggest
A new analysis of enigmatic skulls from the Republic of Georgia suggest that Homo erectus wasn't the only human species to ...
(CNN) — Ancient, fossilized teeth, uncovered during a decades-long archaeology project in northeastern Ethiopia, indicate that two different kinds of hominins, or human ancestors, lived in the same ...
The legendary “Little Foot” fossil may be an entirely new human ancestor. An international team of scientists led by ...
Learn how precisely dated fossils from Morocco reveal a population with a mix of archaic and emerging traits, helping clarify when African and Eurasian human lineages began to diverge.
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