Discover Magazine on MSN
4.4-Million-Year-Old Ankle Holds Clues to How Our Ancient Ancestors Walked
Learn more about Ardipithecus ramidus and how their ankle bone paints a better picture of how our ancestors transitioned from ...
In a 1970 National Geographic feature, paleoanthropologist Richard Leakey—son of Louis and Mary Leakey—recounted his ...
Analysis of a 4.4-million-year-old ankle bone supports the hypothesis that the earliest humans evolved from an ape-like ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
New Early Homo Species Discovered in Africa Defies the “Ape-To-Human” Evolution Theory
A previously unknown species of Australopithecus have been discovered in Ethiopia’s Afar region, coexisting with early Homo over 2.6 million years ago—overturning long-standing assumptions about the ...
The asteroid's neck, or "collum," — which joins the two lobes — has been named Windover. The name comes from the Windover Archaeological Site, which is near Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in ...
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