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Homo erectus haemophilus

Hämostaseologie, 2011
SummaryThe haemophilic arthropathy of the hip, the knee and the ankle makes a painful loss of the degree of movement. Especially the muscles which bend these joints are contracted. This means a loss of posture and quality of life as well.This article demonstrates the possibilities of the conservative and operative treatment and represents an algorithm ...
P. Berdel   +4 more
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Homo Erectus

2017
This chapter describes Homo erectus and its lifestyle. It made more sophisticated handaxes, controlled fire, and migrated halfway around the world. Cognitively, it is likely that Homo erectus had developed self-awareness, and their brains evolved in areas associated with the cognitive trait.
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L’homme de Tautavel. Un Homo erectus européen évolué. Homo erectus tautavelensis

L'Anthropologie, 2015
Resume Cent quarante-huit restes humains ont ete decouverts au cours des fouilles effectuees de 1964 a 2014 dans la Caune de l’Arago a Tautavel dans les Pyrenees-Orientales. Ils ont ete recueillis dans un contexte stratigraphique precis qui a permis d’individualiser 15 unites archeostratigraphiques avec presence humaine dont l’âge est compris entre ...
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Nadaouiyeh – A Homo erectus in Acheulean context

L'Anthropologie, 2015
The Middle East is apparently the most important passage for the dispersal of early hominins. Numerous archeological sites prove the existence of hominin populations in this region, but despite these rich cultural remains, hominin fossils are very rare. In 1996, a hominin left parietal was found in an Acheulean context.
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Defining Homo erectus

2013
Pithecanthropus (now Homo) erectus was first recognized as a species by Eugene Dubois in the 1890s from fossils at the Indonesian site of Trinil. Additional finds from Indonesia and then China expanded the morphological, geographic, and temporal bounds of this species, but it was not until 1960 that H. erectus was recognized in Africa. Since that time,
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Natural history ofHomo erectus

American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2003
Our view of H. erectus is vastly different today than when Pithecanthropus erectus was described in 1894. Since its synonimization into Homo, views of the species and its distribution have varied from a single, widely dispersed, polytypic species ultimately ancestral to all later Homo, to a derived, regional isolate ultimately marginal to later hominin
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Homo erectus

2019
Debasray Saha   +2 more
  +4 more sources

The Homo erectus Stage

1978
Beyond the forest the savannah, beyond the savannah the steppe. Hominids had evolved an adaptive syndrome fitting the savannah; the open steppe was the logical next step. Other lineages of mammals had followed the same procession, as I discussed earlier, from forest to its ecotone with the steppe, to the steppe itself.
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Bone thickness in Homo erectus

Journal of Human Evolution, 1985
Although the presence in Homo erectus of thickened tabular bone in the cranium and thickened cortical bone in the post cranium has been noted by a number of researchers, few hypotheses have been proposed to explain that presence. Using as controls femora from several Homo sapiens groups (Romano-British, Murray Valley Australians and Bushmen), it ...
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Homo Erectus

Scientific American, 1966
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