Latest News for: homo (genus)

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Western Europe's oldest human face discovered in Spain

Phys Dot Org 16 Mar 2025
ATE9-1 was therefore classified as Homo sp., a term which recognized its belonging to the genus Homo, but also accepted our inability to refine it further with the evidence available at the time.
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5 of the oldest human fossils ever found and the fascinating stories behind them

The Times of India 14 Mar 2025
The Ur 501 jawbone is considered the oldest known human fossil from the Homo genus, with an estimated age of between 2.5 and 2.3 million years. At first, scientists believed this jawbone belonged to Homo habilis, a well-known early human species.
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Oldest human FACE is discovered: Ancient man nicknamed 'Pink' lived in Spain up to 1.4 ...

The Daily Mail 13 Mar 2025
Who were Homo antecessor? ... 'Evidence for different hominin populations in Western Europe during the Early Pleistocene suggests that this region was a key point in the evolutionary history of the genus Homo.'EXPLAINED.
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Scientists discover new species of human in Spain

The Daily Telegraph 12 Mar 2025
“The discovery of evidence for different hominin populations in Western Europe during the early Pleistocene suggests that this region was a key point in the evolutionary history of the genus Homo.”.
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We modelled how early human ancestors ran – and found they were surprisingly slow

The Conversation 12 Mar 2025
Until recently, scientists thought that only animals of the genus Homo, which emerged around 2 million years ago, made stone tools ... long Achilles tendon, enabled much faster running in the genus Homo.
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Tiny Human Relatives Walked Upright 2 Million Years Ago, World-First Fossil Find Reveals

IFL Science 07 Mar 2025
robustus and Homo fossils were found together – are so significant ... in the Australopithecines, rather than deserving their own genus ... boisei, the other member of its genus, was considerably larger.
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When did early humans start eating meat? New discovery reveals the answer

The Times of India 07 Mar 2025
There is no strong evidence they hunted or scavenged meat in significant amounts.So when did meat become a staple in the human diet? The answer likely lies with the emergence of the Homo genus around 2 million years ago ... .
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Prehistoric bone tool cache suggests advanced reasoning in early hominins

Ars Technica 06 Mar 2025
For instance, Homo habilis was an early member of our genus who walked upright and had a mixture of human and ape-like features ... called Homo erectus made more complex stone tools, like hand-axes.
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