A collection of bones from Casablanca holds important new clues to the origins of modern humans and Neanderthals.
Between roughly 600,000 and one million years ago, Africa’s fossil record goes strangely quiet. Genetic evidence suggests ...
Fossils unearthed in Morocco are the first from a little-understood period of human evolution and may be remains of a ...
Fossils of archaic humans found in a cave in Casablanca are helping to fill a gap in the history of humanity's evolutionary ...
Where did our species first emerge? Fossils discovered in Morocco dating back more than 773,000 years bolster the theory that ...
Where did our species first emerge? Fossils discovered in Morocco dating back more than 773,000 years bolster the theory that Homo sapiens originally appeared in Africa, according to scientists.
Fossilized bones and teeth dating back 773,000 years, discovered in Morocco, provide insight into early human evolution.
The jawbones and vertebrae of a hominin that lived 773,000 years ago have been found in North Africa and could represent a ...
An international research team reports the analysis of new hominin fossils from the site of Thomas Quarry I (Casablanca, ...
Jawbones and other remains, similar to specimens found in Europe, were dated to 773,000 years and help close a gap in ...
Fossilized bones and teeth dating to 773,000 years ago unearthed in a Moroccan cave are providing a deeper understanding of ...
For decades, anthropologists lumped these ancient populations into a single species, Homo heidelbergensis, long believed to ...