Results 251 to 260 of about 8,201,974 (327)
Complex and diverse patterns of neurocranial development in Australopithecus, Paranthropus and Homo. [PDF]
Braga J, Alemseged Z, Gilissen E.
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Hominin Variability and Evolutionary Relationships at Guattari Cave During the Middle and Late Pleistocene (San Felice Circeo, Latina, Italy). [PDF]
Rubini M +6 more
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Spinal cord evolution in early Homo.
Journal of Human Evolution, 2015The discovery at Nariokotome of the Homo erectus skeleton KNM-WT 15000, with a narrow spinal canal, seemed to show that this relatively large-brained hominin retained the primitive spinal cord size of African apes and that brain size expansion preceded postcranial neurological evolution.
Marc R. Meyer, M. Haeusler
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Current Anthropology, 2012
The origin of Homo is argued to entail niche differentiation resulting from increasing terrestriality and dietary breadth relative to the better known species of Australopithecus (A. afarensis, A. anamensis, A. africanus).
S. Antón
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The origin of Homo is argued to entail niche differentiation resulting from increasing terrestriality and dietary breadth relative to the better known species of Australopithecus (A. afarensis, A. anamensis, A. africanus).
S. Antón
semanticscholar +2 more sources
Early Homo Sapiens: An Introspective Self
, 2017This chapter describes Early Homo sapiens who lived about 100,000 years ago. Behaviorally, they were the first hominins to decorate themselves and wear fitted clothing. They also migrated across the world, including reaching Australia over water. Cognitively it appears that they had developed a second order theory of mind that we call introspection.
E. Torrey
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