149 Good introductions to climate and human evolution include Potts (1996); Stanley (1996); Reed (1997); and Stanley H. Ambrose, «Late Pleistocene human population bottlenecks, volcanic winter, and differentiation of modern humans,»
Journal of Human Evolution 34 (6): 623 - 651 (1998).
162 Climate pumping along Silk Road route to China: Adam Chou, «Migration of early hominids during the Pleistocene,»
Journal of Human Evolution 40 (3): A5 (March 2001).
Hominids in arid environments, see Kaye E. Reed, «Early hominid evolution and ecological change through the African Plio - Pleistocene,»
Journal of Human Evolution 32:289 - 322 (1997).
72 Chimpanzees in drier areas: W. C. McGrew, P. J. Baldwin, C. E. G. Tutin, «Chimpanzees in a hot, dry and open habitat: Mt. Assirik, Senegal, West Africa,»
Journal of Human Evolution 10: 227 - 244 (1981); A. Kortlandt, «Marginal habitats of chimpanzees,»
Journal of Human Evolution 12: 231 - 278 (1983).
Journal of Human Evolution 32:289 - 322 (1997).
197 Sally McBrearty and Alison S. Brooks, «The revolution that wasn't: A new interpretation of the origin of modern human behavior,»
Journal of Human Evolution 39 (5): 453 - 563 (November 2000), at p. 492.
A new study published in
the Journal of Human Evolution finds that Homo floresiensis, a teensy little hominin species first discovered only a little more than a decade ago in a cave on the indonesian island of Flores, probably doesn't fit into the human family tree the way we thought.
A recently published study in the «
Journal of Human Evolution» now announced a new «sensational discovery» from the Thuringian fossil site.
A special volume of
the Journal of Human Evolution presents the state of research... more
Journal of Human Evolution Vol.
PNAS — Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA AJPA — American Journal of Physical Anthropology C.R.Acad.Sci.Paris — Comptes Rendus de l'AcadÈmie des Sciences, Paris JHE —
Journal of Human Evolution Sci.
A study in
the Journal of Human Evolution says the bones of Homo floresiensis can be connected to one of the earliest known human species.
Neanderthals shared Europe with a mysterious member of our genus that may represent an entirely new species of human, suggests a paper accepted for publication in
the Journal of Human Evolution.
In an article now available online in
the Journal of Human Evolution, four scientists present evidence that the 47 - million - year - old Darwinius masillae is not a haplorhine primate like humans, apes and monkeys, as the 2009 research claimed.
But in mid-April, Debbie Argue and colleagues published a paper in
the Journal of Human Evolution, returning to the knotty problem of the Flores hominin and its place in human evolution.
The conclusions, in press at
the Journal of Human Evolution, were announced today at simultaneous press conferences in Paris and Johannesburg, led by Bruxelles and Clarke, respectively.
Researchers have unearthed the most primitive primate yet discovered, a tree - dwelling creature that could nestle in the palm of your hand, according to an October paper in
the Journal of Human Evolution.
It looks like the modern human offed the Neandertal with the kind of stone point Neandertals, couldn't come up with; that's what the report in
the Journal of Human Evolution says.
Journal reviewers kept questioning their analysis, but eventually all the work was published in
the Journal of Human Evolution.
In October in
the Journal of Human Evolution, Metin Eren, a graduate student at the University of Exeter in England and Southern Methodist University in Dallas, appraised the qualities of flint knives he had re-created in the styles of both Neanderthals and Cro - Magnons, the early modern humans of Europe.
The study has been published in
the Journal of Human Evolution.
The findings were published online this week in
the Journal of Human Evolution.
The study of these new remains has been published in
the Journal of Human Evolution, and has also had the participation of researchers of the CNRS (French National Centre for Scientific Research) in Paris and Bordeaux.
It also explains what factors make some surviving species more at risk today, says a study in
the Journal of Human Evolution.
What is more, the bone suggests it flexed and extended its ankle to launch into the air (
Journal of Human Evolution, doi.org/ccvq).
Splits are rare; genetics suggests the groups can last for centuries (
Journal of Human Evolution, doi.org/smp).
When the team compared these scans with those of the skulls of Homo sapiens from temperate regions, they found Neanderthals» sinuses were only bigger because they had bigger faces; the two species» sinuses had the same relative size relationship (
Journal of Human Evolution, DOI: 10.1016 / j.jhevol.2010.10.003).
The size of the bone falls within the ranges of Homo habilis and Homo floresiensis (
Journal of Human Evolution, DOI: 10.1016 / j.jhevol.2010.04.008).
Journal of Human Evolution 10 (1981): 175 - 188.
Or, as cognitive scientist Stephanie Braccini and colleagues put it in
a Journal of Human Evolution study, «a strengthening of individual asymmetry [may have] started as soon as early hominins assumed a habitual upright posture during tool use or foraging».
Not exact matches
The discoveries reported in two independent studies in the American
Journal of Human Genetics on January 7 add to evidence for an important role for interspecies relations in human evolution and specifically in the evolution of the innate immune system, which serves as the body's first line of defense against infec
Human Genetics on January 7 add to evidence for an important role for interspecies relations in
human evolution and specifically in the evolution of the innate immune system, which serves as the body's first line of defense against infec
human evolution and specifically in the
evolution of the innate immune system, which serves as the body's first line
of defense against infection.
The study underlines the significance
of southern African archaeological remains in defining
human origins, and is published in the
journal Genome Biology and
Evolution, now online.
A new study titled Body size downgrading
of mammals over the late Quaternary, released Friday in the
journal Science, is the first to quantitatively show that
human effects on mammal body size predates their migration out
of Africa and that size selective extinction is a hallmark
of human activities and not the norm in mammal
evolution.
Evolution and its discontents: A role for scientists in science education (2008) American Association
of Physics Teachers, American Astronomical Society, American Chemical Society, American Institute
of Biological Sciences, American Institute
of Physics, American Physical Society, American Physiological Society, American Society for Investigative Pathology, American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, American Society
of Human Genetics, Biophysical Society, Consortium
of Social Science Associations, Geological Society
of America, Federation
of American Societies for Experimental Biology, National Academy
of Sciences, National Science Teachers Association and Society for Developmental Biology, The FASEB
Journal, Vol.
She is the guest editor
of a new themed issue
of the Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society B, the oldest scientific
journal in the world, that focuses on an interdisciplinary approach to
human evolution.
Rather, they write in a paper published online in the
Journal of Anatomy, it appears the chin's emergence in modern
humans arose from simple geometry: As our faces became smaller in our
evolution from archaic
humans to today — in fact, our faces are roughly 15 percent shorter than Neanderthals» — the chin became a bony prominence, the adapted, pointy emblem at the bottom
of our face.
«Understanding how this extinction happened and what role
humans may have played could help us understand how extinctions are progressing today and what we can do to prevent them,» says Siobhán Cooke, M.Phil., Ph.D., assistant professor
of functional anatomy and
evolution at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine and lead author
of the study, described online in the
Journal of Mammalogy on August 1.
These findings, published in the
journal Nature
Human Behaviour, are a major step forward in understanding the evolution of human intellig
Human Behaviour, are a major step forward in understanding the
evolution of human intellig
human intelligence.
Researchers from Florida Atlantic University and the University
of Miami are the first to address these questions in a study published in the
journal Evolution and
Human Behavior.
The results, reported May 8 in the
journal Nature
Human Behavior, place the appearance of human - like cognition at the emergence of Homo erectus, an early apelike species of human first found in Africa whose evolution predates Neanderthals by nearly 600,000 y
Human Behavior, place the appearance
of human - like cognition at the emergence of Homo erectus, an early apelike species of human first found in Africa whose evolution predates Neanderthals by nearly 600,000 y
human - like cognition at the emergence
of Homo erectus, an early apelike species
of human first found in Africa whose evolution predates Neanderthals by nearly 600,000 y
human first found in Africa whose
evolution predates Neanderthals by nearly 600,000 years.
«Anatomically modern
humans colonized Europe around 45,000 - 43,000 years ago, replacing Neanderthals approximately 3,000 years later, with potential cultural and biological interactions between these two
human groups,» said Professor Hervé Bocherens, a biogeologist at the Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University of Tübingen, Germany, and lead author of a study published in the journal Scientific Rep
human groups,» said Professor Hervé Bocherens, a biogeologist at the Senckenberg Center for
Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University of Tübingen, Germany, and lead author of a study published in the journal Scientific Rep
Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University
of Tübingen, Germany, and lead author
of a study published in the
journal Scientific Reports.
For a study published in the
journal Biological Psychiatry, Ole Andreassen and colleagues compared genetic information from Neanderthals and modern
humans and found an association between markers
of human evolution and genetic risk for schizophrenia.
The study, published in the
journal Nature Communications, presents compelling evidence that stone tool - making helped to drive the
evolution of language and teaching among prehistoric
human ancestors in the African savanna.
The Leonardo Project was born in Florence, Italy, is sponsored by the Tuscan Regional Council and is the subject
of a special issue
of the
journal Human Evolution.
A new paper, forthcoming in the
Journal of Evolution and
Human Behavior, does just that and finds that for most people political beliefs is not something they choose to advertise to potential mates.
Foreword by James Rosenquist vii Preface by Ira Goldberg viii Acknowledgments x Introduction: Miracle on 57th Street 1 Part 1: Lessons and Demos 15 Henry Finkelstein: On Painting, with a Critique 17 Mary Beth McKenzie: Painting from Life 27 Ephraim Rubenstein: Painting from Observation 39 Thomas Torak: A Contemporary Approach to Classical Painting 59 Dan Thompson: Learning to Paint the
Human Figure from Life 75 Sharon Sprung: Figure Painting from Life in Oils 91 Frederick Brosen: Classic Watercolor Realism 107 Naomi Campbell: Working Large in Watercolor 123 Ellen Eagle: Poetic Realism in Pastel 135 Costa Vavagiakis: The
Evolution of a Concept 148 Part 2: Advice and Philosophies 165 William Scharf: Knowing that Miracles Happen 167 Peter Homitzky: Inventing from Observation 181 Charles Hinman: Painting in Three Dimensions 193 Deborah Winiarski: Painting and Encaustic 203 James L. McElhinney:
Journal Painting and Composition 213 Part 3: Interviews 229 Frank O'Cain: Abstraction from Nature 231 Ronnie Landfield: On Learning and Teaching 251 Knox Martin: Learning from Old and Modern Masters 269 Concours: Painting and the Public at the Art Students League by Dr. Jillian Russo 282 Index 286
The study appears today in a special
human -
evolution issue
of the
journal Proceedings
of the National Academy
of Sciences.
A recent study published in the
journal Evolution and
Human Behavior looked at the types
of male and female faces young adult women find more attractive as a function
of their relationships with their parents.1