Discover Magazine on MSN
11,000-year-old volcanic ash layer could rewrite early human history in the Americas
Learn how new research challenges the age of Monte Verde and what it means for early human migration in South America.
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Ancient climate records reveal a wetter Levant that may have guided early humans out of Africa
For modern residents of the Levant, the "Red Sea Trough" usually brings a brief, dusty transition between seasons. But ...
A new study in Science challenges the Monte Verde timeline, reshaping when humans first reached South America.
The evidence shows that the ‘Ubeidiya site is at least one million nine hundred thousand years old. This finding represents a ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Study questions evidence at key Chile site tied to early Americans
A new study published in the journal Science argues that Monte Verde, an archaeological site in southern Chile long ...
Researchers revisited the 1970s discovery of ancient stone tools at Monte Verde—an iconic site in Chile that transformed our understanding of how and when humans arrived in the Americas.
Saturday, March 21, is the Swallows Day Parade in San Juan Capistrano. The cliff swallows fly from Argentina, one of the ...
Mosquitoes haven’t always had a taste for human blood — partly because the tiny yet dangerous insects have been around a lot ...
Homo erectus is arguably the first hominin that really started to resemble us, with shorter arms and longer legs than species that came before. It was also the first human ancestor known to have ...
For too long, the global conversation about migration in Africa has been dominated by a single, crisis-driven narrative: boats crossing the Mediterranean, ...
Homo erectus skulls from China’s Yunxian archaeological site revealed ages close to two million years—a million years older ...
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