Results 121 to 130 of about 3,420 (168)
Reduced Adult Neurogenesis in Humans Results From a Tradeoff Rather Than Direct Negative Selection. [PDF]
Morizet D, Bally-Cuif L.
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Should scientists be allowed to bring distant human ancestors back to life? [PDF]
Caplan AL.
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Gigantopithecus and the Origins of Hominidae
Nature, 1970A re-examination of the available Gigantopithecus material has revealed that most of the supposed “man-like” characteristics of this fossil primate are not, in fact, hominid at all.
David Pilbeam, Pilbeam David
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Journal of Human Evolution, 1984
A variety of new chronometric, biostratigraphic and other data and a reanalysis of previous research indicates maximum ages of 0·1–1·3 m.y.a. for the earliest known Asian hominids. Most of the data suggest that the majority of known Asian hominids are less than 1·0 m.y.a. All of these hominids can be incorporated within the taxa Homo erectus or Homo
G.G. Pope, J.E. Cronin
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A variety of new chronometric, biostratigraphic and other data and a reanalysis of previous research indicates maximum ages of 0·1–1·3 m.y.a. for the earliest known Asian hominids. Most of the data suggest that the majority of known Asian hominids are less than 1·0 m.y.a. All of these hominids can be incorporated within the taxa Homo erectus or Homo
G.G. Pope, J.E. Cronin
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Human Evolution, 1998
Traditional taxonomy of Hominoidea collides head on with the latest proposals of classification, grounded on molecular studies. Therefore, the common-sense meaning of “hominidae” does not fit some of the current technical meaning anymore. Besides, there is no consensus among molecular scholars about what genera should be placed into the Hominidae ...
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Traditional taxonomy of Hominoidea collides head on with the latest proposals of classification, grounded on molecular studies. Therefore, the common-sense meaning of “hominidae” does not fit some of the current technical meaning anymore. Besides, there is no consensus among molecular scholars about what genera should be placed into the Hominidae ...
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An Early Miocene Member of Hominidae
Nature, 1967Hitherto, the earliest fossils recognized as belonging to the Hominidae, from Fort Ternan and the Siwaliks, have been dated to the Mio-Pliocene. Discoveries in early Miocene deposits at Songhor and Rusinga, Kenya, have made it possible to carry the date of the separation of the true Hominidae from the Pongidae back to the Lower—or possibly Early Middle—
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2013
Russell A. Mittermeier, Anthony B. Rylands, Don E. Wilson (2013): Hominidae. In: Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 3 Primates.
Russell A. Mittermeier +2 more
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Russell A. Mittermeier, Anthony B. Rylands, Don E. Wilson (2013): Hominidae. In: Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 3 Primates.
Russell A. Mittermeier +2 more
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Placental alkaline phosphatase in Hominidae
Nature, 1979HUMAN placental alkaline phosphatase has several unique properties. It is stable to heating at 65 °C (ref. 1), is immunochemically distinct from the isoenzymes in other adult organs2,3, and has a large number of allelic variants4–6, with a ‘degree of heterozygosity’ much larger than that of any other human enzyme studied to date7.
G J, Doellgast, K, Benirschke
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