Meet 'Pink', the new face of human evolution in Europe Western Europe has a new oldest face: the facial bones of an adult nicknamed "Pink" discovered in Spain are from a potential new member of the ...
The research team at the Atapuerca archaeological sites in Burgos, Spain, has just broken its own record by discovering, for ...
New fossil evidence from a Spanish cave suggests an unknown prehistoric human population once lived in Europe.
Imagine the scene, around 3 million years ago in what is now east Africa. By the side of a river, an injured antelope keels ...
The Spanish team says the latest remains are more primitive than Homo antecessor but bear a resemblance to Homo erectus.
A fragment of a face from a human ancestor is the oldest in Western Europe, according to the results published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
Scientists in Spain have excavated fossilized facial bones that may be from a previously unknown species of the human family. The bones are roughly 1.1 million to 1.4 million years old, according to ...
A fossil of a partial face from a human ancestor is the oldest in western Europe, archaeologists reported Wednesday. The incomplete skull — a section of the left cheek bone and upper jaw – was found ...
The fossils — which may date back to 1.4 million years — were nicknamed “Pink” in honor of iconic rock band Pink Floyd.
The fragmentary facial bones belong to Homo affinis erectus, an esoteric offshoot of our family tree that inhabited Spain ...