Anthropology
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologySeven footprints may be the oldest evidence of humans on the Arabian PeninsulaIn what’s now desert, people and other animals stopped to drink at a lake more than 100,000 years ago, a new study suggests. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyA stray molar is the oldest known fossil from an ancient gibbonA newly described tooth puts ancestors of these small-bodied apes in India roughly 13 million years ago. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Humans HumansAncient sculptures hint at universal facial expressions across culturesInterpreting the emotions carved onto sculptures from long ago offers a new way to study how humans perceive facial expressions. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyBetter playground design could help kids get more exercisePlaygrounds designed for imaginative play can make a difference in how much kids move By Emily Anthes
- 			 Genetics GeneticsSouth Americans may have traveled to Polynesia 800 years agoDNA analyses suggest that Indigenous people from South America had a role in the early peopling of Polynesia. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Life LifeScientists want to build a Noah’s Ark for the human microbiomeJust as the Svalbard Global Seed Vault protects global crop diversity, the Microbiota Vault may one day protect the microbes on and in our bodies. 
- 			 Genetics GeneticsThe oldest genetic link between Asians and Native Americans was found in SiberiaDNA from a fragment of a 14,000-year-old tooth suggests that Native Americans have widespread Asian ancestry. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyAfrica’s biggest collection of ancient human footprints has been foundPreserved impressions in East Africa offer a glimpse of ancient human behavior. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologyThe earliest known humans in Europe may have been found in a Bulgarian caveNew finds from Bulgaria point to a relatively rapid expansion of Homo sapiens into Eurasia starting as early as 46,000 years ago, two studies suggest. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology Anthropology16th century skeletons suggest the slave trade brought some diseases to MexicoSlaves buried in a 16th century grave in Mexico had hepatitis B and yaws, suggesting the slave trade helped spread some versions of those diseases. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Anthropology AnthropologySkeletal damage hints some hunter-gatherer women fought in battlesContrary to traditional views, women in North American hunter-gatherer societies and Mongolian herding groups likely weren’t all stay-at-home types. By Bruce Bower
- 			 Paleontology PaleontologyTwo primate lineages crossed the Atlantic millions of years agoPeruvian primate fossils point to a second ocean crossing by a now-extinct group roughly 35 million to 32 million years ago. By Bruce Bower