Sentences with phrase «human evolutionary history»

Human evolutionary history suggests, according to many authors, that all humans, regardless of sex or gender, survive and thrive if they are loved and cared for.
[10] In human evolutionary history, the Moro reflex may have helped infants cling to the mother while being carried around.
Patterns of human genetic diversity: Implications for Human Evolutionary History and Disease.
Attendance at birth has been suggested to be essential in facilitating mother - child survival as the physiology of birth changed during human evolutionary history.
Africa, with its rich human evolutionary history, holds the greatest genetic diversity.
«This is among the first studies to show that political views may be rational in another sense, in that they're designed by natural selection to function in the conditions recurrent over human evolutionary history
«Genomes from these more remote populations really can tell us a huge amount about human evolutionary history,» says Evelyn Jagoda, a Harvard University evolutionary genetics Ph.D. student and co-author of one of the studies.
To reconstruct modern human evolutionary history and identify loci that have shaped hunter - gatherer adaptation, we sequenced the whole genomes of five individuals in each of three different hunter - gatherer populations at > 60 × coverage: Pygmies from Cameroon and Khoesan - speaking Hadza and Sandawe from Tanzania.
His work, he said, «has helped to illuminate human evolutionary history and serves to bring disease presentation into an evolutionary perspective.»
Martin Trauth of Potsdam University and colleagues found geological evidence that deep, freshwater lakes existed around 2.6 million, 1.8 million and 1 million years ago — key dates in human evolutionary history.
Going forward, Trautwein and her multidisciplinary colleagues will continue to research the strange lives of mites and how they relate to human evolutionary history and health.
«This is a significant result because it's commonly thought our most modern forms of cognition only appeared very recently in terms of human evolutionary history,» said Shelby S. Putt, a postdoctoral researcher with The Stone Age Institute at Indiana University, who is first author on the study.
«This is a simply stunning fossil discovery that has provided a fascinating new piece in the puzzle of human evolutionary history.
While in Oxford, she pioneered the earliest applications of bone DNA typing in forensic identification and human evolutionary history.
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