Visual behavior during the manufacture of stone tools is analyzed for the first time; the study has been published in the Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology
Footprints indicate the presence of man in Southern Spain in the Middle Pleistocene, 200,000 years earlier than previously thought
A study, published in the journal PNAS, discovers a surprising relationship between the teeth and the evolution of pregnancy
European Middle Pleistocene populations had similar dental traits, suggesting that the settlement of Europe was the product of intermittent dispersals into Europe from a “mother” population
Investigating the diploic veins in skulls with premature suture fusion: a new study has been published on the Journal of Morphology
Galería de las Estatuas in Atapuerca could be one of Spain’s most ancient Neanderthal sites; a new study published on Quaternary Geochronology
Can a Neanderthal meditate? A new study on Intelligence might shed light on the attentional capacity of extinct hominins
‘Homo erectus’ from Gongwangling could have been the earliest population in China; a new study published on the Journal of Human Evolution
Digging is not just a game for children in hunter-gatherer groups; a new study has been published on Human Nature
Experience influences the visual processing of stone tools: knowledge and experience affect the distribution of the attention during visual exploration of Paleolithic tools