The face of the first anatomically-modern human to live in Europe has been revealed. It belonged to a man - or woman - who inhabited the ancient forests of the Carpathian Mountains in what is now Romania about 35,000 years ago. The artist's reconstruction - a face that could be male or female - is based on the partial skull and jawbone found in a cave where bears were known to hibernate. The facial features indicate the close affinity of these early Europeans to their immediate African ancestors, although it was still not possible to determine the person's sex.
Locations for the Garden of Eden have been offered many times before, but seldom in the inhospitable borderland of Angola and Namibia. A new genetic survey of people in Africa, the largest of its kind, suggests that the region in the south-west of the continent seems to be the origin of modern humans. The authors have also identified some 14 ancestral populations.
Fossilised human footprints found A fossilised pair of human footprints has been found at Ganjo Takar hills in Tando Muhammad Khan. A team of experts from Sindh comprising Hakim Ali Shah, Badar Abro, Ishtiaque Ansari and Abdul Aziz Ranjhani recently visited the area and photographed the footprints, which were in custody of the local people.
A group of scientists have unveiled what they say is the most comprehensive study ever of African genes. Published following a decade of study, the researchers say their findings give new insight into the origins of humans. The first humans probably evolved near the South Africa-Namibia border before migrating north, the study says.
New research pinpoints origins of humans in Africa A massive new genetic study proposes that humans originated near the border of modern-day South Africa and Namibia, a far more specific understanding than the vaguer picture of African origin that previously reigned.
In his article "Pristine Vleesbaai in the firing line" (April 12), Bobby Jordan wrote that the bay is "thought to be the cradle of humankind". Not so! - Michael Wilson, Cape Town
The epic droughts that seared West Africa from the 1960s through the 1980s, killing or displacing millions of people as crops shrivelled and water sources dried up, are not the worst that the region's climate is capable of. During the last 2,700 years, there have been six "mega-droughts" lasting a century or longer in West Africa, according to new research by scientists, including University of Akron geologist John Peck, who studied clues to the region's climate history etched in layers of mud drilled from the bot tom of a lake.
Paleoanthropologists working in Africa have discovered stone blades more than a half-million years old. That pushes the date of the earliest known blades back a remarkable 150,000 years and raises a question: What human ancestor made them? Not long ago, researchers thought that blades were so hard to make that they had to be the handiwork of modern humans, who had evolved the mental wherewithal to systematically strike a cobble in the right way to produce blades and not just crude stone flakes. First, they were thought to be a hallmark of the late Stone Age, which began 40,000 years ago. Later, blades were thought to have emerged in the Middle Stone Age, which began about 200,000 years ago when modern humans arose in Africa and invented a new industry of more sophisticated stone tools. But this view has been challenged in recent years as researchers discovered blades that dated to 380,000 years in the Middle East and to almost 300,000 years ago in Europe, where Neanderthals may have made them. Now it appears that more than 500,000 years ago, human ancestors living in the Baringo Basin of Kenya collected lava stone cobbles from a riverbed and hammered them in just the right way to produce stone blades. Paleoanthropologists Cara Roure Johnson and Sally McBrearty of the University of Connecticut, Storrs, recently discovered the blades at five sites in the region, including two that date to between 509,000 and 543,000 years ago.
1.5 Million-Year-Old Fossil Humans Walked on Modern Feet Ancient footprints found at Rutgers' Koobi Fora Field School show that some of the earliest humans walked like us and did so on anatomically modern feet 1.5 million years ago. The footprints were discovered in two 1.5 million-year-old sedimentary layers near Ileret in northern Kenya. These rarest of impressions yielded information about soft tissue form and structure not normally accessible in fossilized bones. The Ileret footprints constitute the oldest evidence of an essentially modern human-like foot anatomy.
Archaeologists working deep inside Gorham's Cave, Gibraltar have discovered a rare prehistoric painting, that could be up to 13,000 years old, of a deer. To the untrained eye it looks like a series of random scrawls on the cave wall. But with the help of the experts, the outline of an animal crowned with a distinctive set of antlers quickly becomes clearly discernible.