Jake Paul cancels Tank Davis fight, calls him 'human garbage,' but fans accuse Paul of hypocrisy for booking fight knowing ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Million-year-old sea crossing near ‘Hobbit’s’ island rewrites early human history
More than a million years ago, early human relatives crossed an enormous sea to reach the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. The ...
2hon MSN
First animal in space! Brave stray dog whose 1957 space mission made history and never returned
Laika, a stray dog from Moscow, became the first living creature to orbit Earth aboard Sputnik 2 in 1957. Her one-way mission ...
Joe Scott on MSN
This Is the Earliest Human Face Ever Preserved
For tens of thousands of years, early humans painted animals on cave walls with incredible realism - but almost never painted themselves. Faces were missing, bodies were simplified, and human ...
Imagine early humans meticulously crafting stone tools for nearly 300,000 years, all while contending with recurring ...
Medium on MSN
6 of the Oldest Candies in Human History
While the idea of a sweet treat dates back thousands of years, the concept of "candy" has been around for hundreds of years. These are some of the oldest candies in human history.
From prehistoric burials to overcrowded Victorian churchyards, this is what our treatment of the dead throughout history says about the living ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
A Giant Kangaroo Bone Is Challenging the Idea That Humans Wiped Out Australia’s Megafauna
Indigenous Australians may have been early "paleontologists," not big-game hunters, according to a new analysis ...
Initial inquiries by a national taskforce suggest available lines of inquiry were not pursued in some sex abuse gang cases. | ...
A new documentary puts viewers in the shoes of Neanderthals and early humans, giving an intimate glimpse into humans’ ...
Researchers uncovered a 2.75–2.44 million-year-old site in Kenya showing that early humans maintained stone tool traditions for nearly 300,000 years despite extreme climate swings. The tools, ...
New research along Turkey’s Ayvalık coast reveals a once-submerged land bridge that may have helped early humans cross from Anatolia into Europe. Archaeologists uncovered 138 Paleolithic tools across ...
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