Homo habilis was thought to be the first hominin to use stone tools for hunting and processing meat, but they might have been prey instead of predators.
History Hit TV on MSN
The Schöningen Spears | The Oldest Weapons in Human History_
Are these some of the earliest weapons in human history? History Hit’s Tristan Hughes speaks to Dr Annemieke Milks, ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
🍖 Early humans were prey, not predators
Early humans were not the feared masters of the savanna long imagined. On the contrary, some still served as meals for big ...
Digital reconstruction of a crushed skull from an ancient human could rewrite the timeline of human evolution, according to ...
A new study may be about to rewrite a part of our early human history. It has long been thought that Homo habilis, often considered the first true human species, was the one to turn the tables on the ...
New evidence suggests Neanderthals were rendering fat nearly 100,000 years before other early humans
The hunting and gathering activities of early humans required a high-calorie diet consisting of a variety of macronutrients—protein, carbohydrates, and fat. While hunting big-game animals—like deer, ...
IFLScience on MSN
400,000-Year-Old Fossil Shows Butchering Elephants Helped Early Humans To Supersize Their Tools
The authors of a study of the specimen conclude the elephant was butchered using small stones, as indicated by both the ...
For decades, textbooks painted a dramatic picture of early humans as tool-using hunters who rose quickly to the top of the food chain. The tale was that Homo habilis, one of the earliest ...
Digital reconstruction of a crushed skull from an ancient human relative could rewrite the timeline of human evolution, researchers said. A cranium dubbed Yunxian 2 was found in the Yunxian region of ...
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