So, ensure to ask your family
history about bone health so as to know how to live your life.
Not exact matches
Yes, the available
history says that the heart was in the possession of the church
about a century later, so either someone kept it for a long time after cutting it out of his corpse — yeah, that sounds likely — or it is a medieval «relic» that is actually the heart of a pig or a sheep that some clergyman sold along with genuine pieces of the cross and
bones from St. Peter to make a buck on the rubes, uh, faithful.
«Only
about one
bone in a billion, it is thought, ever becomes fossilized,» explains Bill Bryson in A Short
History of Nearly Everything.
Until now, we knew little
about this
bone's natural
history, except that it is present in Old World monkeys and gibbons but generally not in our more recent ape relatives.
«Looking at the evolutionary tree, and knowing something
about evolution and Earth
history, we predicted there would be a The 4 - to 9 - foot - long creature had fins, which held limblike
bones forming a shoulder, elbow, and wrist that could do a push - up; broad ribs and scales; and a neck that allowed the animal to swivel its head.
WRITTEN IN
BONE DNA from a 37,000 - year - old skeleton found at the Kostenki archaeological site in Russia supports recent findings and offers new ones
about the
history of human evolution.
The
history of the first
bone marrow transplant Jovana Drinjakovic of the Signals blog wrote a wonderful story
about the first
bone marrow transplant cases in adults:
Ultimately, Matthew Goodman pulls together a riveting story that has the
bones of a true and fascinating
history and the heart of a great adventure: The reader not only learns
about Nellie Bly and her attempt to exceed the travel time of Jules Verne's Phileas Fogg in Around the World in Eighty Days, but also has the pleasure of visiting the world of the 1890s, meeting Joseph Pulitzer, understanding the plight of Chinese workers in America, traveling in luxury trains and boats, seeing beautiful places before industrial pollution took place, and so much more.
If you're writing a how - to eBook
about repairing jet engines, still find a way to share relatable stories,
history, or information that give the
bones of your eBook some meat.
I mainly blog
about science,
bones, bioarchaeology, anthropology, art, culture, and
history.