Intersecting paths of muddy footprints left on a Kenyan lakeside 1.5 million years ago suggest two of our early human ...
Researchers say the footprints were left in the mud by two different species, perhaps within a matter of hours or days.
A new study of ancient footprints is the first ever to show that our early ancestors coexisted in a shared space.
A study by an international team reveals 1.5-million-year-old footprints from Koobi Fora, Kenya, showing two distinct ...
The discovery offers new insight into human evolution, particularly between the two early human species, known as hominins — a term for a subdivision of hominids. Hominins are all organisms within the ...
Footprints found in Koobi Fora, Kenya, reveal Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei coexisted 1.5 million years ago, with ...
Smithsonian: Fossil Footprints Reveal That Two Early Human Relatives Lived on the Same Landscape in Kenya 1.5 Million Years ...
The footprints were left in the mud by two different species “within a matter of hours, or at most days,” said ...
Researchers discovered 1.5-million-year-old footprints in Kenya's Turkana Basin, revealing coexistence of Paranthropus boisei ...
The bones they found in the sand were a clue that something more was buried beneath the surface. When a team of excavators in ...
The research included professors Kevin Hatala from Chatham U. in Pittsburgh and Craig Feibel of Rutgers and showed two human ...
Muddy footprints left on a Kenyan lakeside suggest two of our early human ancestors were nearby neighbors some 1.5 million years ago.