A study on the teeth of ancestors to humans that lived around 3.5 million years ago suggests they ate mainly or only plants.
Chemicals in the tooth enamel of Australopithecus suggest the early human ancestors ate very little meat, dining on vegetation instead.
Scientists suggest meat consumption was pivotal to humans' development of larger brains, but the transition probably didn't ...
New research provides the first direct evidence that Australopithecus, an important early human ancestor that displayed ... brain development - during human evolution. Animal resources provide ...
Nitrogen isotope analysis of tooth enamel reveals no evidence of meat consumption in Australopithecus. New research published ...
However, direct evidence of when meat emerged among our early ancestors, and of how its consumption developed though time, has been elusive. A team of researchers from the Max Planck Institute for ...
New research provides the first direct evidence that Australopithecus, an important early human ancestor that displayed ... brain development - during human evolution. Animal resources provide ...
New research provides the first direct evidence that Australopithecus, an important early human ancestor that displayed a mix of ape ... capacity - larger brain development - during human evolution.
New research provides the first direct evidence that Australopithecus, an important early human ancestor that displayed ... brain development - during human evolution. Animal resources provide ...