

Offers a time line spanning back four million years to the appearance of the first early hominids and reaching forward to today's Homo sapiens.
- Category:
- Evolution
- Human Evolution
UN Environment (press release)
You wouldn't know it today, but in 1965 Singapore was a polluter's paradise: mucky rivers, polluted canals and raw sewage running rampant. It was a developing country, newly split from neighbouring Malaysia, an island surrounded by waters that now they ...
Discovery Institute
A new episode of ID the Future features “In the Market” radio host Janet Parshall interviewing Center for Science & Culture Senior Fellow Jonathan Witt, co-author of the recent book Heretic: One Scientist's Journey from Darwin to Design. Witt and ...
The Mix
James McClintock, Ph.D., Endowed Professor of Polar and Marine Biology, is the inaugural recipient of the 2018 SCAR Medal for Education and Communication, awarded by the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, for his decadeslong educational ...
Demonstrates how our ancestors have changed over the last 4 million years. Provides information on the location and age of hominid discoveries and how the cranium and other features developed over time.
Offers a time line spanning back four million years to the appearance of the first early hominids and reaching forward to today's Homo sapiens.
Paper by Craig B Stanford and Henry T Bunn on this subject including how the pattern of meat eating in modern people compares with early humans.
Online tutorial about the discovery and analysis of early hominids, the Australopithecines.
Offers photographs of notable Neanderthals fossil specimens.
Reconstructing the behavior of the first hominids (also in Spanish).