Your Search Returned 500 tagged news reports
From the new Nautilus magazine, a special issue on What Makes You So Special . Angela Potochnik reviews Studying Human Behavior: How Scientists Investigate Aggression and Sexuality by Helen Longino. The first chapter from The Unpredictable Species:
Tags:
May 22, 2013 Modern mothers love to debate how long to breast-feed, a topic that stirs both guilt and pride. Now in a very preliminary finding the Neanderthals are weighing in. Nature Two views in cross-section of the Neanderthal child's fossilized
Tags:
Madrid, May 7 (EFE).- Eleven of the 13 Neanderthals who lived in northern Spain 's El Sidron cave were right-handed, indicating that these cousins of modern humans had a brain structure similar to that of Homo sapiens, a study published in Plos One
Tags:
Florian Schuh/European Pressphoto Agency Demonstrators outside the Reichstag in Berlin, this week held a sign reading, We remember the NSU victims. The problem is racism.' The trial of accused neo-Nazi terrorist Beate Zschaepe and four other
Tags:
It suggests that Europeans are basically one big family, closely related to one another for the past thousand years. "What's remarkable about this is how closely everyone is related to each other. On a genealogical level, everyone in Europe traces
Tags:
Chicago Tribune (MCT) Arizona Daily Sun Want to be a part of ancient history? The National Geographic Society's Genographic Project is inviting the public to join its massive effort to map the history of human migration using DNA. More than 560,000
Tags:
Geneticist Steve Jones's new book 'The Serpent's Promise: The Bible As Science' has said that the study of genetics proves that the first traceable female human lived around 100,000 years before the first male, the Daily Express reported. Jones said
Tags:
A cave in Greece has been found to contain 14 specimens of child and adult human remains, providing archaeologists with key insights into the lives and geographical distribution of ancient hominins. In an interview with LiveScience's Charles Choi ,
Tags:
A fresh look at fossilized remains has turned up a surprise: the earliest modern people in Europe. From stone tools and other artifacts, scientists have long suspected that the earliest populations of Homo sapiens, or modern humans, settled the
Tags:
Researchers in Germany said Tuesday they have completed the first high-quality sequencing of a Neanderthal genome and are making it freely available online for other scientists to study. The genome produced from remains of a toe bone found in a
Tags: