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Two new Neanderthals turn upPalaeontologists working in the German valley that gave Neanderthals their name have found the remains of human skeletons, their tools and the animals that lived alongside them. The bones were dug up for the first time, and subsequently discarded, nearly 150 years ago. The finding follows the Neanderthal baby recently found in a French museum 90 years after its excavation.
Life reached land a billion years ago
Life colonised the land more than a billion years ago, far earlier than previously thought.