At some point in the deep past, humans may have come frighteningly close to disappearing altogether. Here’s what we know, ...
Tens of thousands of years ago, the first wave of a worldwide tsunami now known as the “Sixth Extinction” swept across the ...
Very few people live beyond a century. So, if no one had babies anymore, there would probably be no humans left on Earth within 100 years. But first, the population would shrink as older folks died ...
Science Unbound on MSN
Life on Earth in the centuries after humanity’s extinction
This in-depth exploration examines how Earth would transform in the absence of humanity, from the collapse of infrastructure ...
Live Science on MSN
2.6 million-year-old jaw from extinct 'Nutcracker Man' is found where we didn't expect it
A fossil jaw of a distant human relative was discovered much farther north than previously thought possible, revealing new ...
Tim Coulson, a professor at Oxford University, has dedicated years to researching how life evolves. He thinks that if we vanished, it would create space for ...
Investigating the 'overkill' hypothesis, this piece explores how human-wildlife conflict may have driven megafaunal ...
Boing Boing on MSN
Irish elk: the giant deer that towered over humans and went extinct 8,000 years ago
This photo shows how gigantic an Irish Elk looks compared to two humans. Megaloceros giganteus - literally "giant horn" - is ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results