ScienceNew Guinea Warriors Harvested Dead Fathers’ Thigh Skeletons To Make Human Bone Daggers A study found that ancient New Guinea warriors had obtained their fathers’ thigh bones to make human bone daggers. They also intended to make these daggers stronger to preserve the symbolic prestige the weapons gave them.by Athena Yenko
ScienceEarly Humans Might Have Been Excellent Walkers Based On 3.6-Million-Year-Old Footprintsby Jacob Elyachar
ScienceAncient Humans Are The Reason Big Mammals Are Extinct And Mammals Have Shrunkby Jean-Pierre Chigne
ScienceAncient DNA Of Baby Girl Unearthed In Alaska Provides Glimpse Into First Native Americansby Aaron Mamiit
ScienceSaliva Protein Suggests Ancient Human 'Ghost' Species Interbred With Ancestors Of Modern-Day Sub-Saharan African Peopleby Allan Adamson
ScienceAncient Human Relative Could Have Lived Alongside Homo Sapiens: What We Know About The Homo Naledi So Farby Alexandra Lozovschi
ScienceNew Technique For Recovering Ancient DNA Without Bones May Shed Light On Human Evolutionby Athena Chan