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Homo erectus had longer legs ... erectus was able to adjust to this new landscape. The early humans visited water holes that popped up after it rained and hunted the animals that congregated ...
It highlights the adaptability of early humans like Homo erectus to these challenging conditions. Dietary adaptation clues: Stable isotope analysis of herbivore tooth enamel suggests that Homo ...
As humans, to thrive in desert life ... an international research team in Nature Communications Earth & Environment report that our early human relative, Homo erectus, lived in arid terrains in ...
"We reveal how early humans -- known as hominins -- were able ... Manitoba and 17 other institutions around the world shows Homo erectus adapted at least 1.2 million years ago -- long before ...
Minister of Culture Fadli Zon asserted that the cultural heritage of Indonesia, spanning from Sabang, the westernmost point, ...
Our early human ancestors might have been ... though not quite as large as the brains of today’s humans, Homo sapiens. H. erectus persisted for more than 1.5 million years before going extinct ...
Homo erectus was able to adapt ... adapt may have led to the expansion of H. erectus’ geographic range. There has been significant debate over when early hominins acquired the adaptability ...
More than a million years ago, long before our species Homo sapiens emerged, early ... of Homo erectus into the arid regions of Africa and Eurasia, the study said. Modern humans, 200,000 to ...
But humans live pretty much everywhere ... place that seemed inhospitable for early hominins. “The data led us to a pivotal question: How did Homo erectus manage to survive and even thrive ...