Morning Overview on MSN
Archaeologists found a 2,300 year old skull cracking tool
Archaeologists in Poland have uncovered a rare iron instrument that appears to have been used to cut into human skulls more ...
The astonishingly well-preserved nasal cavity of a Neanderthal in Italy has finally settled one of the great debates in ...
The iconic, armored, 14-foot-long Dunkleosteus was something of an "evolutionary oddball,” a new study has revealed.
About 360 million years ago, the shallow sea above present-day Cleveland was home to a fearsome apex predator: Dunkleosteus terrelli. This 14-foot armored fish ruled the Late Devonian seas with ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Neanderthal skull bones suggest their noses weren’t for warming air
Neanderthals have long been portrayed as cold-adapted Ice Age specialists, their broad faces and big noses cast as natural ...
The trepanation tool, which looks like a blade on which the end point was sharpened into a spike, came from a site once ...
An analysis of Neanderthal nose bones suggests the species’ famously large noses did not evolve primarily to warm and ...
Fusing scientific theory with artistry, a team of researchers has generated “stunning” 3D images of the oldest person ever discovered in Egypt. Using photogrammetry, a team of researchers have created ...
The human skeleton — our internal framework that includes bones and cartilage — evolved over millions of years. It comprises an axial skeleton, which consists of the skull and the spine, as well as an ...
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