Tucker Carlson interviews AJ Gentile, host of The Why Files, about giants, the pyramids, psychics, remote viewing and much more. Even if you don't believe in the supernatural, the people who run countries do believe. It's the main thing they beli
As our evolution slows and industrialization and technology accelerates, a growing body of research suggests that human biology is struggling to keep pace.
Using new radiocarbon dating on ancient footprints found preserved in the gypsum-rich ground in White Sands, researchers have now confirmed that humans roamed North America 23,000 years ago. The finding solves a years-long debate questioning the age
But according to a study from 2021 by anthropologists from Israel's Tel Aviv University and the University of Minho in Portugal, modern hunter-gatherers have given us the wrong impression of what we once ate.
"This comparison is futile, howeve
Most of us do it, be it romantic, familial, friendly or formal, but kissing among humans and where and how it originated is still hotly debated among historians and anthropologists.
The Dilemma of the Deserted Husband unfolded in the late 1950s amid a band of G/wi hunter-gatherers, a subgroup of Ju/'hoansi (often known as !Kung San), dwelling in the Kalahari Desert of Southern Africa. According to the South African-born anthro
An answer to this puzzle is beginning to emerge. It looks like brain expansion began as an evolutionary accident and then led to changes that caused this growth to spiral. Surprisingly, the sorts of changes that drove this expansion could also explai
The closest we have to humans running wild are the Abos of Australia and the bushmen of So Africa. Yet they use fire.
understand that there is not much we can eat without access to fire. And fire was key to simply boiling things causing them to
The closest we have to humans running wild are the Abos of Australia and the bushmen of So Africa. Yet they use fire.
understand that there is not much we can eat without access to fire. And fire was key to simply boiling things causing them to
When we hear the word "discrimination" we often associate it with the concept of racial prejudice, the act of hate based purely on skin color or ethnicity.
Tracing the DNA timeline, the researchers could see that the hunter-gatherers had been swiftly wiped out by the late Stone Age, in what they suspect was a very bloody and very thorough takeover.
"This transition has previously been presented as
The sun rises on the Palaeolithic, 14,000 years ago, and the glacial ice that once blanketed Europe continues its slow retreat. In the daylight, a family begins making its way toward a cave at the foot of a mountain near the Ligurian Sea, in northern
Going in search of answers, evolutionary anthropologist Dr Nikhil Chaudhary relied on his observations of the BaYaka people in Congo and extensive anthropological research of other hunter-gatherer societies. He teamed up with Dr Annie Swanepoel, a ch
• hprincipia-scientific.com, by universe-inside-you
For many years, Gobekli Tepe was considered to be the oldest human settlement. Previously taking the title of the first temple in the world, archaeologists recently unearthed Boncuklu Tarla, which is believed to be roughly 1,000 years older than Gobe
Humans have a longstanding relationship with the sea that spans nearly 200,000 years. Researchers have long hypothesized that places like coastlines helped people mediate global shifts between glacial and interglacial conditions and the impact that t
David Attenborough's A Life On Our Planet leaves viewers sobbing as it shows how the great apes are left homeless in Borneo because of deforestation for palm oil
REVEALED: How Native Americans reached Polynesia 800 years ago by raft and interbred with islanders - centuries before European explorers arrived in the Pacific