• Newsletters
  • Gift Membership
Logo Logo
Take Scroll With You Download the app to read our award-winning journalism on the go and stay up-to-date with our notifications.
Get the app Get the app
ANDROID iOS
  • Home
  • Common Ground
  • The India Fix
  • Eco India
  • The Latest
  • The Reel
  • Magazine
  • Video
  • Trending
    • After demolitions in Delhi’s Madrasi Camp, Tamil Nadu offers support to families
    • Why RSS outfit members are at centre of a Rs 14-crore scam at ICHR
    • In Hyderabad, the international style of art deco reveals itself in homes, with personal touches
    • UK’s new rules for international students will worsen university finances
    • ‘Flow love flow flawlessly’: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o’s poetry contemplates truth and justice in Venice
    • Talented Indians thought they could make Germany home, but many want to move on now
    • White roofs can cool down homes – but scaling up this simple solution is a challenge
    • Long shunned as too explicit, an Indian music genre is rising from the margins
    • Nature, who needs it? A writing adventure with Ranjit Hoskote at the Himalayan Writing Retreat
    • Day or night? What’s the best time for a bath?
    • ‘I was astonished’: Valmik Thapar (1952–2025) on spotting one of his beloved tigers in the wild
    • ‘Sister Midnight’ review: Radhika Apte is a blast as a rebellious housewife with a dark side
  • Sections
    • Politics
    • Culture
    • India
    • World
    • Film and TV
    • Music
    • Books and Ideas
    • Business and Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • In Pictures
    • Announcements
    • Bookshop
    • The Field
    • Pulse
    • Elections 2024

Human Migration

  • What a Neanderthal tooth discovered in Serbia tells us about the history of human migration

    What a Neanderthal tooth discovered in Serbia tells us about the history of human migration

    Joshua Allan Lindal, The Conversation Mirjana Roksandic, The Conversation
    · Apr 26, 2019 · 11:30 pm
  • New findings on stone tools suggest prehistoric China may have been more advanced than thought

    New findings on stone tools suggest prehistoric China may have been more advanced than thought

    Ben Marwick, The Conversation Bo Li, The Conversation Hu Yue, The Conversation
    · Nov 22, 2018 · 11:30 pm
  • Ancient DNA in lake mud sheds light on the mystery of how humans first reached America

    Ancient DNA in lake mud sheds light on the mystery of how humans first reached America

    Suzanne McGowan, The Conversation
    · Aug 12, 2016 · 05:30 am