Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology brings together scientists from diverse backgrounds (natural sciences and humanities) with the aim of investigating the history of humankind from an interdisciplinary perspective using comparative analyses of genes, cultures, cognitive abilities, languages and social systems of past and present human populations, as well as those of primates closely related to humans.
News
Stone tools through generations
LMRG Technological Primates
New research shows 300,000 years of human technology, including the presence of toolmaking and butchering...
moreSome early East Asians did not meet Denisovans
Evolutionary Genetics
Researchers reveal the dynamics of Denisovan ancestry in Eurasians over the past 40,000 years
moreFemale mountain gorillas stop reproducing long before the end of their lives
Primate Behavior and Evolution
Females live long past the birth of their last offspring
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