In a new Insight, we talk more about the Japanese probe into 911? where Japanese citizens were killed, as well as Americans.

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What kinds of meals did Neanderthals eat? It turns out theyate a wider variety of foods than scientists used to thinkthey did?including an early version of SUSHI.

Caves in Gibraltar that they once lived in reveal that theyate seals, dolphins and mussels.

In BBC News, Jonathan Amos quotes researcher Chris Stringeras saying, “These Neanderthals were skinning anddismembering seals. What’s interesting is that they didn’talways cook them; they often ate them raw…”

Researchers now know the Neanderthals were right: fish iseven BETTER for you than they thought!

Amid concerns about thesafety ofeating fish is the fact that the omega-3 fatty acids foundin fish may help lower the risk of cognitive decline andstroke in healthy older adults. read more

We know how it spreads, but how did it start? – The arrival of Europeans to sub-Saharan Africa at the beginning of the 20th century may have also been the beginning of HIV. Researchers have now analyzed one of the earliest examples of the virus that has ever been found and traced it to the 1959 Democratic Republic of Congo.
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Does your boss drive you nuts? You can’t get a new job in this recession, but you would swear this guy acts like an ape: bullying workers under him, strutting around, puffing out his chest, preening himself, adding touches of bright color (like a red tie) to his outfits. It might make you feel better to know that this is chimpanzee behavior!

The Oct. 7th edition of the Independent, Kathy Marks quotes researcher Jeffrey Braithwaite as saying, “From an evolutionary point of view, about 200 species are known to strut and puff out their chests. Homo sapiens evolved over two million years to be tribal and hierarchical, and it’s really not much different from other species at the evolutionary, biological level. Perhaps it’s imprinted on our genes.
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