Starting with a cast skull, artist John Gurche builds layers of muscle, fat, and skin to create hyper-realistic busts of human ancestors featured in the new David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. (John Gurche)
This 30,000-year-old handprint from Chauvet Cave in France, made by mixing pigment with saliva inside the mouth and blowing the mixture onto a cave wall, is an emblem of the deep history of human creativity. (James DiLoreto and Donald Hurlbert, Smithsonian Institution )
Some cave paintings were likely made as shown -- by mixing pigment with saliva inside the mouth and blowing the mixture onto a cave wall. (Karen Carr Studio, Inc.)
Handaxes -- multipurpose tools used to chop wood, butcher animals, and make other tools -- dominated early human technology for more than a million years. Left to right: Africa (1.6 million years old), Asia (1.1 million years old), and Europe (250,000 years old). (Chip Clark, Smithsonian Institution)
Part of an ancient necklace, these 30,000-year-old shells from Cro-Magnon, France represent some of the earliest evidence of humans wearing jewelry. Some shells have traces of ocher, a clue they were colored with pigment. (Chip Clark, Smithsonian Institution)
Early <i>Homo sapiens</i> created these symbolic objects between 60,000 and 30,000 years ago. Using natural materials and creativity, they combined animal and human features into fantastical creatures and fashioned instruments for making music. (Chip Clark, Smithsonian Institution)
The earliest evidence for controlled use of fire comes from the 790,000-year-old site of Gesher Benot Ya'aquov, Israel, as depicted in this illustration. (Karen Carr, Karen Carr Studio, Inc.)
Five fossil human skulls show how the shape of the face and braincase of early humans changed over the past 2.5 million years. (from left to right: <i>Australopithecus africanus, </i>2.5 million years old; <i>Homo rudolfensis,</i> 1.9 million years old; <i>Homo erectus,</i> ~ 1 million years old; <i>Homo heidelbergensis,</i> ~350,000 years old; <i>Homo sapiens,</i> ~ 4,800 years old) (Chip Clark, Jim DiLoreto, & Don Hurlbert, Smithsonian Institution)