Fossil ape teeth open a new window into ancient seasonal climates
Fossilised teeth of ancient mammals from a 17-million-year-old Kenyan site reveals climate variability.
Fossilised teeth of ancient mammals from a 17-million-year-old Kenyan site reveals climate variability.
Increasing climate variability has been implicated as a driving force for the origins of our species (Homo sapiens) over 300,000 years ago,...
Three-million-year-old brain imprints in fossil skulls of the species Australopithecus afarensis (famous for “Lucy” and the “Dikika child’’ from Ethiopia) shed new light on the evolution of brain growth.
250,000 year-oldNeanderthal teeth reveal the oldest exposure to lead and the first natural weaning from breastfeeding.
The critically endangered orangutan - one of humankind’s closest living relatives - has become a symbol of wild nature’s vulnerability in the face of human actions and an icon of rainforest conservation.
A Griffith University researcher hopes a new discovery on orangutan weaning could help conservation efforts for the highly endangered primate....
Dental and medicine students on the Gold Coast are singing up a new path to success.
Discovery of rare early human fossils from Indonesia further unravels mystery of 'Hobbits'.
Scientists confirm endangered lamprey living in coastal rivers of Queensland.
In this instalment of Griffith University’s Better Future for All series, journalist Kerry O’Brien explores the future and impact of AI with leading global thinker Professor Toby Walsh.