Discover the latest articles and insights about Evolution
Beyond the 'pleasure chemical' myth Dopamine, often called the brain's 'pleasure chemical,' drives human behavior in ways far more complex than simple reward-seeking. Neuroscientist Nikolay Kukus...
Rare genetic condition reshapes social behavior A genetic disorder known as Williams Syndrome (WS) causes individuals to treat strangers with extraordinary warmth and trust, offering scientists n...
Fossil discovery reveals Permian-era battle scars Paleontologists have uncovered evidence of a violent confrontation between two prehistoric predators that roamed Earth 260 million years ago,...
Lost Galapagos rail reappears after nearly two centuries The near-flightless Galapagos rail, absent from Floreana Island since Charles Darwin's 1835 visit, has unexpectedly returned following the...
Why shared meals endure as a cornerstone of human connection For millennia, humans have gathered around food-not just to eat, but to bond. From campfire feasts to modern dinner parties, the ritua...
Raccoons show early signs of domestication in urban areas, study finds Raccoons, often dubbed "trash pandas" for their habit of rummaging through garbage, are undergoing subtle evolutionary chang...
Kissing dates back over 21 million years, shared by apes and possibly Neanderthals A new study published in Evolution and Human Behaviour reveals that mouth-to-mouth kissing likely emerged more t...
Colombian snakes reveal toxin-avoidance tactics in the wild Ten royal ground snakes from the Colombian Amazon, starved for days in captivity, were offered a dangerous meal: three-striped poison d...
Ancient skulls rewrite timeline of dog domestication A groundbreaking study published in Science challenges long-held assumptions about when and how dogs evolved from wolves into the diverse bree...
Autumn's fiery foliage puzzles scientists despite its beauty From the golden yellows of Duchess County, New York, to the muted browns of drought-stressed Maine and the fiery reds of Japan's maple...
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