Discover Magazine on MSN
Over 400,000-year-old evidence of fire-making unearthed — thousands of years earlier than once thought
Learn more about the creation of fire, and how new artifacts show that fire was used tens of thousands of years earlier than ...
National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek is retracing the path of human migration. More specifically, the scientific ...
University of California San Diego researchers have discovered the enzyme responsible for chromothripsis, a process in which ...
UC San Diego scientists discover enzyme responsible for scrambling cancer genomes; results could enable new treatments for ...
University of California San Diego researchers have discovered the enzyme responsible for chromothripsis, a process in which a single chromosome is shattered into pieces and rearranged in a scrambled ...
Barclays 23rd Annual Global Technology Conference December 11, 2025 11:05 AM ESTCompany ParticipantsJudson Althoff - ...
The discovery site at East Farm, Barnham, England lies hidden within a disused clay pit tucked away in the wooded landscape between Thetford and Bury St Edmunds. Professor Nick Ashton from the British ...
Medney (" Beyond Kuiper ") and co-author Don Macnab-Stark have crafted an intelligent examination of the human condition in ...
NICK ASHTON: We think humans brought pyrite to the site with the intention of making fire. ROTT: Which would make the site ...
Researchers say they’ve uncovered new evidence in present-day England that could reshape our understanding of human evolution ...
More than a decade after the first Neanderthal genome was sequenced, scientists are still working to understand how ...
New research by English archaeologists presents strong evidence for the earliest known use of fire by ancient humans.
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