Recent research and articles by various authors, including Razib Khan and others, have shed new light on the origins of Native Americans and the interactions between early humans and Neanderthals. The studies suggest that humans may have settled the Americas over 30,000 years ago, much earlier than previously believed, and that they coexisted with Neanderthals in Europe. These findings challenge previous assumptions and provide a more complex understanding of human migration and evolution.
In the past, Neanderthals were thought to live in small, highly mobile groups of about 20 individuals at most. But a study from last year suggests far bigger groups—big enough to slaughter and process an entire elephant. #ScienceMagArchives https://t.co/cl2eBJs73n
Humans moved into northern #Europe much earlier than previously thought, surviving the biting cold and living there at the same time as Neanderthals https://t.co/Kt5fYSQK95
Researchers believed the first settlers of North America crossed the Beringia land bridge 13,500 years ago. Now, archaeological and genetic evidence suggests humans may have settled the Americas over 30,000 years ago. Read new @razibkhan article: https://t.co/fnl8lf4aWR 1/6
Researchers believed the first settlers of North America crossed the Beringia land bridge 13,500 years ago. Now, archaeological and genetic evidence suggests humans may have settled the Americas over 30,000 years ago. Read @razibkhan in @palladiummag: https://t.co/fnl8lf4aWR…
Three new papers were published simultaneously, all about confirming that a group of Upper Palaeolithic humans had managed to reach central Europe whilst living alongside/avoiding Neanderthals. We now know that humans attempted to enter Europe on several occasions and initially… https://t.co/yHnRgKwlKN
Excellent article on the paleoanthropology of the Americas: The Native Americans Before the Native Americans by @razibkhan in @palladiummag https://t.co/2n3XZifNET
Uncanny Neander Valley https://t.co/syt2YPgqyf By curious chance, humanity’s reckoning with our Neanderthal kin dovetails with our reckoning with evolution; Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species in 1859 and the first ancient human remains accurately identified as a new…
Our perspective piece "The Promise of Inferring the Past Using the Ancestral Recombination Graph (ARG)" is out. Work with @deboraycb, @christiandhuber and @CharlestonCWKC : https://t.co/wxAru7hkL6
new piece from me in @palladiummag where i'm trying to lay out the exciting but uncertain time we are in re: the genetics and archaeology of the peoples of the New World and their origins... https://t.co/sugIGGlmlF
new piece from me in @palladium where i'm trying to lay out the exciting but uncertain time we are in re: the genetics and archaeology of the peoples of the New World and their origins... The Native Americans Before the Native Americans https://t.co/sugIGGlmlF