Results 131 to 140 of about 3,420 (168)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Revista Farol
Este texto toma o trabalho Hominidae (2009), de Ricardo Alvarenga, para refletir sobre sua contribuição, nas relações estabelecidas entre arte e cidade, e no projeto Arte Móvel Urbana da Secretaria de Cultura da cidade de Uberlândia MG. A iniciativa rompeu com os espaços expositivos tradicionais e incentivou artistas a utilizarem a cidade como matéria ...
Yara Paula Martins +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Este texto toma o trabalho Hominidae (2009), de Ricardo Alvarenga, para refletir sobre sua contribuição, nas relações estabelecidas entre arte e cidade, e no projeto Arte Móvel Urbana da Secretaria de Cultura da cidade de Uberlândia MG. A iniciativa rompeu com os espaços expositivos tradicionais e incentivou artistas a utilizarem a cidade como matéria ...
Yara Paula Martins +2 more
openaire +1 more source
The origin of the Hominidae: Africa or Asia?
Journal of Human Evolution, 1976Abstract The authors review the evidence for the evolution of the apes and their geographical expansion out of Africa during the Miocene. The ecological background is discussed at each period. From this it is concluded that Dryopithecines in either Africa or Eurasia could have given rise to early Hominidae and that the ecological conditions in both ...
B.G. Campbell, R.L. Bernor
exaly +2 more sources
Early Hominidae and Cranial Capacity
Nature, 1969WOLPOFF1 has recently argued that the cranial capacity of the type specimen of Homo habilis2 from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania (Olduvai hominid 7), is not sufficiently different from those of South African Australopithecus africanus to warrant placement in a separate species. He arrives at this conclusion by pooling the sets of observations from Olduvai and
openaire +2 more sources
Toward a Life History of the Hominidae
Annual Review of Anthropology, 1995Two new developments promise to greatly improve our ability to reconstruct the evolution of the human life cycle: 1. the introduction of the comparative methodology of life history into anthropology and 2. research on bone and dental development that reveals a world of life history preserved in the fossil record.
B. Holly Smith, Robert L. Tompkins
openaire +2 more sources
Bone Smashing by Late Miocene Hominidae
Nature, 1968Bones found in the Upper Miocene Fossil Beds of Fort Ternan, Kenya, show evidence of having been broken up by some kind of blunt instrument.
openaire +2 more sources
Hominidae (Große Menschenaffen)
2003Nach traditioneller Ansicht wurden die Namen „Pongidae“ und „Grose Menschenaffen“ als Synonyme behandelt und die afrikanischen Gattungen Pan (Schimpansen) und Gorilla (Gorillas) ebenso wie die asiatische Gattung Pongo (Orang-Utans) gemeinsam der Familie der „Pongidae“ zugeordnet.
openaire +1 more source
Character Displacement and the Evolution of the Hominidae
The American Naturalist, 1968The hominids recovered from the early Pleistocene in Africa appear to constitute two distinct lineages. The first consists of gracile forms characterized by small cheek teeth and relatively large canines and incisors. All of these creatures have been assigned to the genus Homo (Robinson, 1967), and to this group may be referred Homo transvalensis from ...
openaire +1 more source

