A skeleton found in the Lake Turkana Basin area of northern Kenya is the most complete set of remains ever found of Homo ...
An international research team reports an unusually well-preserved Homo habilis skeleton that dates to just over 2 million ...
Scientists have revealed the most complete skeleton yet of our 2 million-year-old ancestor Homo habilis.
An international research team has unveiled a significant discovery in human paleontology: an exceptionally well-preserved ...
At this very moment, voracious cells are eating away at your bones. Not to worry, though — that’s just a normal part of bone maintenance in healthy adults. The formation of new bone cells balances out ...
Pascal Buenzli receives funding from The Australian Research Council (project grant DE130101191). Natalie Sims receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council and The Australian ...