A new study shows how the loss of large animals thousands of years ago still shapes ecosystems today and may affect their ...
The last Neanderthals lived in Western Europe but disappeared within a few thousand years of the arrival of modern humans.
Tiny crystals suggest extinct volcanoes could still grow underground, a finding that could reshape how scientists assess ...
A new study suggests Neanderthals didn’t go extinct simply because of climate change or competition with Homo sapiens. Instead, the key difference may have been social connectivity—Homo sapiens formed ...