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Anthropology
Speculative evolution explores the strange paths natural selection might have taken — and what that means for humans.
The revival of Pasto Varnish shows how living heritage can survive if knowledge is passed on in time.
Scientists found a massive underwater wall off the coast of France that might help explain the origin of the legend of Ys.
In this excerpt from "Playful," Cas Holman surveys the research that brought the neuroscience of play into the mainstream.
In “The Secret History of Denisovans,” Silvana Condemi and François Savatier trace the story of our mysterious hominin ancestor.
After more than a million years of separation, two branches of humanity reunited around 300,000 years ago, suggests new research.
In "Dinner with King Tut," Sam Kean examines how a burgeoning field is recreating ancient tasks to uncover historical truths.
English could settle into a state of "diglossia" where a gulf exists between the written form and its spoken varieties, but the two are bound into a single tongue.
From religious iconography to modern mysticism, the human aura has been a subject of fascination across centuries and cultures.
In his book, "Birds, Sex and Beauty," Matt Ridley explores why learning isn't always nature versus nurture.
Whether we should tear down philosophy’s Berlin Wall and let East and West finally merge depends entirely on what we think philosophy is—and what it’s for.
Dubbed "Valeriana" by researchers, the city of 50,000 peaked around 800 AD before being swallowed by the jungle.
Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
From tribal hunts to Stonehenge and into the modern day, the peer instinct helps humans coordinate their efforts and learning.
Early modern humans interbred with Neanderthals — and scientists recently pinpointed a key site of contact.
From hunter-gathers to desk jockeys, we work best when short, intense sessions are followed by lighter fare.
The hidden story behind Greek surnames and how they trace family origins across the country — starting with the name of a would-be U.S. president.
In ancient Sparta, it was accepted practice for more women to marry and have children by more than one man.