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The human body is a machine whose many parts – from the microscopic details of our cells to our limbs, eyes, liver and brain ...
Rats respond to human touch with joy, revealing how physical connection may build trust across species and support ...
Over the course of three instalments, Q&Q presents the titles we’re most excited about this fall. This week’s final ...
For more than six decades, the International Primatological Society (IPS) has brought scientists, conservationists and ...
When female gorillas leave one social group and join another, they tend to seek out groups with other females that they've ...
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The Brighterside of News on MSNFossilized teeth reveal a risky diet change spurred human evolution
A timeless question has always fascinated scientists who study the past. Which comes first, the new behavior or the physical ...
Peer-reviewed publication highlights ATI-1701’s robust protection against aerosolized Francisella tularensis exposure in multiple animal models ...
A new Dartmouth-led study reveals that hominins began eating carbohydrate-rich foods long before their teeth evolved to ...
Long before evolution equipped them with the right teeth, early humans began eating tough grasses and starchy underground ...
The findings come from a team led by researchers at Dartmouth College, and offer the human fossil record’s first known ...
Ape behavior just got a name upgrade — “scrumping” — and it might help explain why humans can handle alcohol so well.
Lab grown models of embryos, made from clusters of stem cells, are getting increasingly complex. Ethicists, regulators and ...
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