A new study analyzes the nasal cavity of the "Altamura Man," a Neanderthal who died between 130,000 and 172,000 years ago ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Neanderthal skull found with a remarkably intact nose
The most complete Neanderthal skull ever examined has given researchers something they have never had before: a virtually ...
Discover new clues about how our ancient relatives disappeared from time. Despite its proximity to other groups of ...
A tiny Crimean bone links Neanderthals to Siberia, revealing long-distance networks shaped by shifting climates and migration ...
Wellbeing Whisper on MSN
Thorin’s DNA Reveals a Lost Neanderthal World
Two weeks’ walk can be an eternity in prehistory. In southern France’s Rhône Valley, a Neanderthal by the name of “Thorin” ...
ZME Science on MSN
Grim Discovery in Belgian Cave Reveals Neanderthals Ate Their Own Kind, Possibly as an Act of War
Forty-one millennia ago, deep inside a Belgian cave, Neanderthals left behind a disturbing legacy. Mixed in with the ...
Human remains found inside a Belgian cave tell a grisly story of selective cannibalism among our hominid cousins.
Belgian cave analysis shows Neanderthal cannibalism involving nonlocal women and children who were killed and eaten 45,000 ...
An analysis of Neanderthal nose bones suggests the species’ famously large noses did not evolve primarily to warm and ...
How far back in evolutionary history does kissing go? Through phylogenetic analysis, an international team of scientists ...
Evidence from a prehistoric cave system indicates non-ritualistic cannibalism of Neanderthal women and children.
Live Science on MSN
Did Neanderthals have religious beliefs?
Neanderthals left behind various clues about their enigmatic lives. But less is known about their spiritual sides. Some ...
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