Latest updates for Homo Erectus

Fresh curated links around homo erectus are collected here so marketers can spot useful updates and turn timely ideas into posts faster.

Recent items include:

  • Cave-Dwelling <em>Homo Erectus</em> May Have Burned Owl Pellet Remains Nearly 1.8 Million Years Ago
  • Traces of Homo erectus Fire Use Dated to 1.8 Million Years Ago
  • Ancient human ancestors may have first used fire 1.79 million years ago

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discovermagazine.com /1 month ago

Cave-Dwelling &lt;em&gt;Homo Erectus&lt;/em&gt; May Have Burned Owl Pellet Remains Nearly 1.8 Million Years Ago

Learn about new evidence from Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa that may represent the earliest use of fire by human ancestors. 

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archaeology.org /2 weeks ago

Traces of Homo erectus Fire Use Dated to 1.8 Million Years Ago

TORONTO, CANADA—Science News reports that evidence for the oldest use of fire by hominins has […] The post Traces of Homo erectus Fire Use Dated to 1.8 Million Years Ago appeared f...

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scientificamerican.com /3 weeks ago

Ancient human ancestors may have first used fire 1.79 million years ago

A new method that detects whether bones have been burned reveals Homo erectus brought fires into caves far earlier than previous evidence had suggested

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refractor.io /1 month ago

Homo erectus may have passed a genetic legacy down to modern humans after all

Sally Christine Reynolds, Bournemouth University/ The ConversationContinue ReadingCategory: Biology,

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phys.org /1 month ago

Ancient tooth proteins suggest Homo erectus may have left a genetic legacy in people today

For most of the 20th century, the model of human origins was a tree: with the trunk dividing into branches, and then twigs. Each species of human relative (hominin) was a neat, sin...

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haaretz.com /1 week ago

New theory of smallest human: Not a hunter, but eater of lizard leftovers

Strange 'hobbits' of Indonesia didn't hunt elephants after all, or cook them, says new paper, supporting theory of deeply archaic ancestry. How many hominins left Africa?

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ancientpages.com /2 days ago

Homo Naledi Fossil In Rising Star Cave Could Represent First Gender-Specific Burials By A Nonhuman Species

Jan Bartek - AncientPages.com - Scientists have extracted and analyzed the first-ever ancient proteins from the fossils of Homo naledi, revealing a potential all-female burial site...

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scientificamerican.com /1 month ago

Did Homo erectus and Denisovans mate? Tooth proteins hint at ancient trysts

Genetic analysis suggests interbreeding between two groups of human relatives

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arstechnica.com /6 days ago

Flores Hobbits' eating habits offer clues about their evolutionary past

If Homo floresiensis wasn't a fire-using hunter, its origins could be different than we thought.

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gizmodo.com /3 weeks ago

Humans Were Using Fire Long Before Scientists Thought Possible, Study Says

An international team in South Africa has pinned the earliest known use of fire by Homo erectus back to between 1.07 and 1.79 million years ago.

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Sources covering Homo Erectus

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gizmodo.com

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newatlas.com

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phys.org

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