Research uncovers early humans' reliance on plant-based foods, revealing ancient tools and 780,000-year-old starch grains.
A new archaeological study, conducted along the Jordan River banks south of northern Israel’s Hula Valley, offers a fresh ...
Meat-eating by early hominids at the FLK 22 Zinjanthropus site, Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania): an experimental approach using cut-mark data. Journal of Human Evolution 33, 669-690 (1997). Domínguez ...
Ability of early humans to process plants using tools indicative of high level of cooperation, researchers say ...
and the first migration of hominids outside Africa. The Nariokotome boy and his kind represent the beginning of a new phase of human prehistory.
Israeli researchers discover 780,000-year-old evidence of plant food processing at archaeological site, suggesting early ...
leading paleoanthropologists to infer that these fossils represent early members of the hominin lineage. The first human-like traits to appear in the hominin fossil record are bipedal walking and ...
We now understand that early hominids gathered a wide variety of plants ... This discovery opens a new chapter in the study of early human diets and their profound connection to plant-based ...
An archeological discovery sheds new light on prehistoric cooking and raises questions as to the validity of the basis of ...
New research challenges the carnivore diet myth, revealing that early humans relied heavily on plant-based foods for energy.