The prominent researcher has been put on administrative leave pending an investigation into unspecified allegations.
What can social networks among hunter-gatherers in Tanzania teach us about how cooperation evolved in human populations?
What can social networks among hunter-gatherers in Tanzania teach us about how cooperation evolved in human populations?
Exceptional neural fossil preservation helps answer questions about ancient arthropod evolution.
How organisms keep their biological partners from cheating
The genomes of a 5,200-year-old woman and three 4,000-year-old men yield clues about the founding of Celtic populations.
A genomic study suggests that dogs diverged from wolves in Southeast Asia 33,000 years ago, contrary to reports placing their origins elsewhere on the continent.
Bacteria growing in an unchanging environment continue to adapt indefinitely.
Phylogenetic analysis of DNA isolated from human hair follicle–dwelling mites shows that different lineages of the arthropods are associated with hosts with different regional ancestries.
Researchers studying city-dwelling birds are learning about which animals are more suited to urban life.
Researchers unearth a dog-size, horned dinosaur from eastern North America, whose features suggest evolutionary isolation from western dinos.
A reanalysis of phylogenetic data places sponges, rather than comb jellies, back at the base of the animal tree.