Results 211 to 220 of about 9,954 (259)
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The Middle Pleistocene human tibia from Boxgrove

Journal of Human Evolution, 1998
The Boxgrove tibia was discovered in 1993, associated with Middle Pleistocene fauna, and Lower Palaeolithic archaeology. The sediments at Boxgrove were deposited during a temperate interglacial episode and ensuing cold stage. They thus represent a wide range of modes and environments of deposition.
C B, Stringer   +4 more
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The Middle Pleistocene of north Birmingham

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 1964
Abstract The Older Drift of north Birmingham infills a system of pre-glacial valleys. Its stratigraphy has been worked out, chiefly from borehole records, showing it to comprise the deposits of two separate glaciations—the Lower and Upper Glacial Series, and an intervening Interglacial Series.
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The proteome of the late Middle Pleistocene Harbin individual

Science
Denisovans are a hominin group primarily known through genomes or proteins, but their precise morphological features remain elusive because of the fragmentary nature of the discovered fossils. Here, we report 95 endogenous proteins retrieved from a nearly complete cranium from Harbin, China, dating to at least 146,000 years ago and ...
Qiaomei Fu   +8 more
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Middle Pleistocene glaciations in Eurasia

The first outline of the Quaternary stratigraphy was established by the end of the 19th century. At that time the actual length of the Ice Age was still unknown. It was assumed that Northwest Europe, like the Alps, had been affected by three glaciations.
Ehlers, Jürgen   +5 more
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Homo Erectus And Later Middle Pleistocene Humans

Annual Review of Anthropology, 1988
Apart from several Neanderthals unearthed in Europe, the earliest discoveries of human fossils were made in Java toward the close of the last century. After finding a skullcap and later a femur at Trinil, Eugene Dubois named Pithecan­ thropus (now Homo) erectus in 1894. Since then, many more bones have come to light, in Africa as well as Asia. Much has
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Middle Pleistocene Adaptations in India

1987
Lower Paleolithic research began in India in 1863, when geologist Robert Bruce Foote (1914) discovered a cleaver in a laterite pit at Pallavaram—a suburb of the city of Madras. In the next four decades Foote himself as well as a number of other geologists and civil servants made discoveries of Lower Paleolithic artifacts and sometimes also of ...
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The Early to Middle Pleistocene Italian Bovidae: biochronology and palaeoecology

2010
Bovids are common elements in the Italian local faunal assemblages (LFAs), but their diversity and ecological role varied in LFAs as well as in faunal units (FUs) throughout the Early and Middle Pleistocene. Representatives of Bovini tribe are continuously present, albeit with different lineages, while “Caprini” are sporadically recorded by several ...
PALOMBO, Maria Rita   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

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