(For those «coming in in the middle» — assuming any such are still reading — this subthread began with a link I provided discussing the vulnerability our complex society bears WRT to very large volcanic eruptions, in the context of the robustness of
some Stone Age populations who «thrived» during the event — albeit at a considerable distance!)
Neither can it be seen in animals, nor deducted from the observations of
stone age populations.
Not exact matches
because your understand of science eclipses that of the god of the bible, gone would be the
stone age morality — slavery, animal sacrifice, destroying whole segments of
populations for absolutely insane reasons - at least I hope it would be better:)
Rapid climate change during the Middle
Stone Age, between 80,000 and 40,000 years ago, during the Middle
Stone Age, sparked surges in cultural innovation in early modern human
populations, according to new research.
«This means that modern humans emerged earlier than previously thought,» says Mattias Jakobsson,
population geneticist at Uppsala University who headed the project together with
Stone Age archaeologist Marlize Lombard at the University of Johannesburg.
Obsidian used for the Middle
Stone Age tools came from far away, raising the likelihood of long - distance contacts and trading among hominid
populations near humankind's root.
Until recently, very little was known about the genetic relationship between modern humans of the Upper Paleolithic
age (the period of time between 50,000 and 10,000 years ago, also called the Late
Stone age) and today's
populations.
Stone Age hominid
populations may have reached «what now seems to be a not - so - new New World,» Hovers writes.
«Ancient DNA reveals genetic «continuity» between
Stone Age, modern
populations in East Asia.»
These variants, which emerged after the
Stone Age, seemed to help
populations better combat infectious organisms, survive frigid temperatures, or otherwise adapt to local conditions.
The failure of these early glimmerings of art and sophisticated weaponry to spread and become permanent fixtures of the Middle Paleolithic and the Middle
Stone Age seems to have been the result of small
population sizes and local extinctions of these
populations and their traditions.
This bold book covers the entire sweep of human history, from the
Stone Age to the Internet, from the stagnation of the Ming empire to the invention of the steam engine, from the
population explosion to the likely consequences of climate change.
This scenario analysis by itself is just more polemic crap: if we go back to
stone -
age wealth and decimate the
population we can do without any new renewables and solar electrical power.
year Publication year, N total sample size, #ES amount of effect sizes, AC child
age category of the child at the start of the program, Design research design, PCDC parent child development centers, CB community - based, CPEP child — parent enrichment project, FGDM family group decision making, HS healthy start, PCIT parent — child interaction therapy, CBFRS community - based family resource service, PUP parents under pressure, SEEK safe environment for every kid, HF healthy families, STEP systematic training for effective parenting, TPBP teen parents and babies program, TEEP Turkish early enrichment project, IFPS intensive family preservation services, ACT adults and children together, CBT cognitive behavioral therapy, PSBCT parent skills with behavioral couples therapy, PCTT parents and children talking together, FIRST family information, referral and support team, NFP nurse family partnership, HSYC healthy steps for young children, REACH resources, education and care in the home, PMD parents make the difference, CPC child — parent center, MST - BSF multisystemic therapy — building stronger families, PriCARE primary child — adult relationship enhancement, SSTP stepping
stones Triple P, CAMP Colorado adolescent maternity program, STEEP steps toward effective and enjoyable parenting, FGC family group conferences, MST - CAN multisystemic therapy for child abuse and neglect, PAT parent as teachers, CM case management, CPS child protective services, NS not specified, QE quasi-experimental, RCT randomized controlled trial, R risk group, GP general
population, M maltreating parents