Most Natural History studies all say most of us totally remember our first encounter with the world of nature.
Not exact matches
Since 2011, when DROP began, more than 40 researchers,
most from the National Museum of
Natural History and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), have intensively
studied deep - reef fishes and invertebrates off Curaçao.
«This is evidence of the
most northerly record for primitive bears, and provides an idea of what the ancestor of modern bears may have looked like,» says Dr. Xiaoming Wang, lead author of the
study and Head of Vertebrate Paleontology at the
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (NHMLA).
«This is one of the
most comprehensive
studies that attempts to date when these evolutionary divergences happened,» says Luis Chiappe, a vertebrate paleontologist at the
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County in California, who wasn't involved in the new research.
«The
Natural History Museum's beetle collection is one of the
most important and extensive in the world, so I'm delighted that it has played such a fundamental part in this
study that uses a novel approach to estimating how many species of beetle exist,» says Professor Owens.
Millions, if not billions, of specimens reside in the world's
natural history collections, but
most of these have not been carefully
studied, or even looked at, in decades.
A. sediba «s «face, teeth, pelvis and legs show more human characteristics, and those indicate that this is the
most human - like australopithecine yet discovered», says Chris Stringer of the
Natural History Museum in London, who was not involved in the
study.
At that time, my position was that
most of the 20th century warming was
natural because as a geologist, I was well aware of climate (climate is a subset of geology because when we
study rocks and their depositional
history, climate is a huge driver of how and why different rocks were deposited).