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Jailed in March: The north Essex criminals locked up this month
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Feering: Man locked up after biting police officer in violent attack
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Feering: Man locked up after biting police officer in violent attack
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Contentious Hypothesis Posits Humans Brains Grew Larger as We Hunted Smaller Prey
STEPHANIE PAPPAS, LIVE SCIENCE
12 MARCH 2021
Over the course of the Pleistocene epoch, between 2.6 million years ago and 11,700 years ago, the brains of humans and their relatives grew.
Now, scientists from Tel Aviv University have a new hypothesis as to why: As the largest animals on the landscape disappeared, the scientists propose, human brains had to grow to enable the hunting of smaller, swifter prey.
This hypothesis argues that early humans specialized in taking down the largest animals, such as elephants, which would have provided ample fatty meals. When these animals numbers declined, humans with bigger brains, who presumably had more brainpower, were better at adapting and capturing smaller prey, which led to better survival for the brainiacs.
Sarah Townsend
The university has almost finished its long-awaited redevelopment of a 3.5-acre gateway site next to Liverpool Lime Street station into a students’ centre and sports building.
Main contractor Morgan Sindall Construction has reached practical completion on 280,000 sq ft of new facilities, which are expected to be open in time for the 2021/22 academic year in September, subject to Government Covid-19 guidance.
Liverpool John Moores University sought to regenerate the site of the former Royal Mail sorting office in Liverpool City Centre through its £64.5m scheme, which won planning approval in 2018 after a previous deferral by the council.
The completed project comprises a five-storey Student Life Building on the corner of Copperas Walk and Skelhorne Street. This will house a range of student-facing services including an advice and wellbeing centre, career advisory services, a student union, general teaching and common learning space.