⚠ war-conflict · severity 2/5
China scientists argue that harsh settings, not warm climates, drive early human creativity
South China Morning Post Business·6d·Media
Archaeologists in central China have directly challenged the long-held belief that humanity’s earliest ancestors reached their creative peak during warm and hospitable climates. For more than a decade, a team of researchers in Henan province has studied a 146,000-year-old animal-butchering site once inhabited by Homo juluensis, an extinct human species that lived about 300,000 years ago in eastern Asia. Their discovery of remarkably inventive tools suggests that these ancient cousins of Homo...
Channelssemiconductors, stocksCountrieschina, asiaCategorieswar-conflict
Open original source ↗Published
5/24/2026, 8:00:06 AM
Fetched
5/24/2026, 8:01:16 AM
Confidence
60 / 100
Relevance
47 / 100
Trust
media · 60/100
Language
en