Why do no two human faces look quite the same? Although we all follow the same biological blueprint, our features—the curve ...
Kissing is more than just "mouth-to-mouth" touching, and the study doesn't really shed much light on why humans kiss the way ...
A new study that examines how kissing evolved suggests that ape ancestors and early humans like Neanderthals probably locked ...
It is not a recent cultural development. A new study in Evolution and Human Behavior suggests kissing may date back 21 ...
A groundbreaking DNA discovery reveals how Neanderthals crossed vast distances.
A tiny Crimean bone links Neanderthals to Siberia, revealing long-distance networks shaped by shifting climates and migration ...
Neanderthals may have never truly gone extinct, according to new research – at least not in the genetic sense.
The Omo-Turkana basin in Africa is home to a treasure trove of ancient human fossils and tools that span 300,000 years – today it is still yielding new discoveries about our species ...
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
26 Footprints, 3 Individuals, 1 Hunt: The Day Neanderthals Stalked the Coast
On Portugal’s Algarve coast, researchers uncovered 82,000-year-old fossilized footprints left by Neanderthals, including ...
Prehistoric Jomon people in Japan had 'little to no' DNA from the mysterious Denisovans, study finds
The prehistoric Jomon people of Japan had "unexpectedly low" levels of DNA from the Denisovans, our mysterious human ...
History With Kayleigh Official on MSN
80,000 Years, 1 Genome, Endless Shades: What Neanderthals Really Looked Like
Genetic research shows that Neanderthals had far more variation in skin and hair color than once believed. From red-haired, freckled individuals in Europe to darker-skinned populations closer to the ...
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