Clues from Our Cousins
Planet of the Apes
by David R. Begun
During the Miocene epoch, as many as 100 species of apes roamed throughout the Old World. New fossils suggest that the ones that gave rise to living great apes and humans evolved not in Africa but Eurasia.
Bonobo Sex and Society
by Frans B. M. de Waal
The behavior of a close relative challenges assumptions about male supremacy in human evolution.
Diet and Primate Evolution
by Katharine Milton
Many characteristics of modern primates, including our own species, derive from an early ancestor's practice of taking most of its food from the tropical canopy.
Why Are Some Animals So Smart?
by Carel van Schaik
The unusual behavior of orangutans in a Sumatran swamp suggests a surprising answer.
The Human Odyssey
Stranger in a New Land
by Kate Wong
Stunning finds in the Republic of Georgia upend long-standing ideas about the first hominids to journey out of Africa.
The Littlest Human
by Kate Wong
A spectacular find in Indonesia reveals that a strikingly different hominid shared the earth with our kind in the not so distant past.
Founder Mutations
by Dennis Drayna
A special class of genetic mutations that often cause human disease is enabling scientists to trace the migration and growth of specific human populations over thousands of years.
The Rise of Homo Sapiens
How We Came to Be Human
by Ian Tattersall
The acquisition of language and the capacity for symbolic art may lie at the very heart of the extraordinary cognitive abilities that set us apart from the rest of creation.
The Morning of the Modern Mind
by Kate Wong
Controversial discoveries suggest that the roots of our vaunted intellect run far deeper than is commonly believed.
The Emergence of Intelligence
by William H. Calvin
Language, foresight and other hallmarks of intelligence are very likely connected through an underlying facility that plans rapid, novel movements.
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