Not exact matches
You see kids, back when I joined the online world in the
ancient days of 1995 (you wouldn't BELIEVE how much of a pain it is to cram a cuneiform tablet into a modem), the internet was a much
different realm — email existed, FTP existed, a few text - heavy websites existed, but a significant part of our social interaction took place in a huge and diverse set of discussion
groups collectively called the Usenet.
Now
ancient DNA from the fossilized skeleton of a short, dark - skinned, dark - eyed man who lived at least 36,000 years ago along the Middle Don River in Russia presents a
different view: This young man had DNA from all three of those migratory
groups and so was already «pure European,» says evolutionary biologist Eske Willerslev of the Natural History Museum of Denmark at the University of Copenhagen, who led the analysis.
These people interbred at the edges of their separate populations, keeping the entire complex network interconnected — and so giving the
ancient Kostenki man genes from three
different groups.
While most of the
ancient Bavarians looked genetically like Central and Northern Europeans, one
group of individuals had a very
different and diverse genetic profile.
«For example, we identify distinct events happening at
different times among
groups sampled within Pakistan, with some inheriting DNA from sub-Saharan Africa, perhaps related to the Arab Slave Trade, others from East Asia, and yet another from
ancient Europe.
In an
ancient Indian parable, a
group of blind men touches
different parts of a large animal to find what it is.
The two species also show other dental features that
group them with later Old World monkeys and apes, but are still
different enough to be classified as separate — and more
ancient — species.
An
ancient fish that sported a saw blade - like whorl of serrated teeth — and was long presumed to be a member of the shark family — actually belonged to a
different but closely related
group, a new study suggests.
To try to pin an age on these fossil genes and determine when these
ancient infections happened, Taylor and his co-authors — virologist Jeremy Bruenn, and bioinformatics specialist Robert Leach, both also of SUNY Buffalo — compared the viral remnants in
different species and found they were nearly identical, indicating that they infected mammals only once early in evolution, and then the viral remnants were passed down as the
groups diverged.
Rajesh Kana and Lauren LiberoIn an
ancient Indian parable, a
group of blind men touches
different parts of a large animal to find what it is.
He works on a variety of
different groups, including dinosaurs and
ancient mammals.
My
group went on three
different hikes: to the Golan Heights, the
ancients palace site of Masada, and lastly to Ein Gedi, an oasis west of the Dead Sea that is made up of a breathtaking series of hills, springs, and waterfalls.