Space.com on MSN
From Afar to Olduvai: asteroid Donaldjohanson's landmarks get names tied to human origins
The asteroid's neck, or "collum," — which joins the two lobes — has been named Windover. The name comes from the Windover Archaeological Site, which is near Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in ...
Shamahi charts humanity's evolutionary odyssey. We sat down with her to discuss the path of our species out of Africa to global hegemony.
Live Science on MSN
How long does DNA last?
The world's oldest DNA comes from a 2.4 million-year-old ecosystem in Greenland. Will scientists eventually sequence even older DNA?
Arlington's oldest elementary school is celebrating its 100th anniversary on Friday with student-centered activities and a community picnic. Festivities at Barcroft Elementary School will include a hu ...
An 1844 religiously inspired songbook that uses shape notes to help people read music got a major update recently and it attracting younger singers.
The National on MSN
The UAE flight routes launched and coming soon in 2025
Etihad Airways is having a busy 2025 after launching flights to many new destinations at the start of the year and adding other routes since. It's not the only UAE carrier that is expanding its ...
The domestication of wolves took place over a long period of time. Ancient bones roughly 15,000 years old of dogs that we’d recognise today have been discovered in various locations. Although the ...
Archaeologists in Saudi Arabia have discovered hundreds of rock art engravings that were carved by humans more than 12,000 years ago.
Research on María Branyas, the world's oldest woman at 117, reveals how healthy diet, beneficial gut bacteria and protective genes contributed to her record-breaking longevity.
New Scientist on MSN
The oldest human mummies were slowly smoked 14,000 years ago
For at least 10,000 years, humans across South-East Asia were being carefully preserved after death by being smoke-dried – a tradition that continues to this day in some cultures ...
Digital reconstruction of a crushed skull from an ancient human could rewrite the timeline of human evolution, according to researchers.
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