Newly discovered fossils from the Lower Cretaceous Lujiatun of the Yixian Formation in China show a deadly battle between a Gobiconodont mammal and a Psittacosaurid dinosaur.
A team of Chinese scientists discovered a giant sinkhole with a forest at its bottom.
Like modern humans, Neanderthal made and used bone tools for their daily needs.
An unknown species of human apparently mastered obsidian, something it had been thought only occurred in the Stone Age.
Based on reported sightings, some scientists say the iconic creature probably survived until the late 1980s or 1990s, but others are skeptical.
Two extremely large flint knives, described as giant handaxes, were amongst the unearthed artifacts.
The discovery of human artifacts made from a long-extinct sloth bones pushes back the estimated date of human settlement in Brazil to 25,000 to 27,000 years.
A novel nematode species from the Siberian permafrost shares adaptive mechanisms for cryptobiotic survival.
Language trees with sampled ancestors support a hybrid model for the origin of Indo-European languages.
New skeletal DNA analysis proves that who first called themselves English had origins in Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands.