Fossil teeth challenge the idea that large brains drove extended childhood, suggesting cultural transmission shaped human evolution.
Meet NSLS-II Vacuum Group Leader Robert Todd and learn about the crucial role high-tech vacuum systems play in maintaining ...
Could social bonds be the key to human big brains? A study of the fossil teeth of early Homo from Georgia dating back 1.77 million years reveals a prolonged childhood despite a small brain and an ...
Early humans may have reached adulthood around the same age as great apes, but with a slower, human-like pattern of tooth ...
Paul Tafforeau and Vincent Beyrand at the European Synchrotron (ESRF), scanning teeth. Credit: ESRF/Stef Candé 3D reconstruction of the fossil skull of the sub-adult early Homo from the Dmanisi site ...
Could social bonds be the key to human big brains? A study of the fossil teeth of early Homo from Georgia dating back 1.77 ...
In the new study, Zollikofer and his team examined several teeth that were uncovered over 20 years ago in the Caucasus ...
Coelacanths are strange fish that are currently only known from two species found along the East African coast and in ...
A recent article in Materials & Design presented an in-situ study of compression creep and stress relaxation in a Fe-based ...
Russia's SKIF Photon Source delayed by sanctions on imported parts Neutron research centre expansion postponed due to budget constraints Synchrotron modernisation now expected in 2028, two years ...
The significant role of science in society and its relevance in our daily lives is celebrated today, Nov. 10, as World ...