Results 171 to 180 of about 2,108 (213)
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Journal of Human Evolution, 1997
In discussions of the Neandertals, there has been repeated emphasis on the accelerated rate of attrition and the frequent presence of labial beveling of their incisors. Interpretations of this dental attrition have related it to paramasticatory and dietary uses of their anterior teeth as well as to aspects of their facial morphology.
P S, Ungar +3 more
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In discussions of the Neandertals, there has been repeated emphasis on the accelerated rate of attrition and the frequent presence of labial beveling of their incisors. Interpretations of this dental attrition have related it to paramasticatory and dietary uses of their anterior teeth as well as to aspects of their facial morphology.
P S, Ungar +3 more
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Three-dimensional morphometrics of thoracic vertebrae in Neandertals and the fossil evidence from El Sidrón (Asturias, Northern Spain) [PDF]
Well preserved thoracic vertebrae of Neandertals are rare. However, such fossils are important as their three-dimensional (3D) spatial configuration can contribute to the understanding of the size and shape of the thoracic spine and the entire thorax ...
Markus Bastir, Luis Rios, Alon Barash
exaly +2 more sources
Scientific American, 2009
The article discusses the extinction of Neandertals which are the closest relatives to humans and the mystery surrounding their disappearance. Scientists have debated where these prehistoric people fit on the family tree of human evolution and what happened to them since the discovery of Neandertal fossils in 1856.
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The article discusses the extinction of Neandertals which are the closest relatives to humans and the mystery surrounding their disappearance. Scientists have debated where these prehistoric people fit on the family tree of human evolution and what happened to them since the discovery of Neandertal fossils in 1856.
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Troubling the Neandertals: A Reply to Langbroek's ‘The Trouble with Neandertals’
Archaeological Dialogues, 2001We cannot but agree with the basic contentions of Langbroek's paper that 1) the replacement of Neandertals by early modern humans in Europe is best understood from a perspective of historical contingency and 2) that it must have had a lot to do with the ‘very dynamic spatio-temporal redrawings of the population maps of Europe during the Weichsel ...
João Zilhão, Erik Trinkaus
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Scientific American, 2010
The article discusses a report in the May 7, 2010 issue of "Science" titled "A Draft Sequence of the Neanderthal Genome," by evolutionary anthropologists at the Max Planck Institute. Topics include an overview of an evolutionary theory called reproductive isolation and genome sequencing, as part of the Max Planck study, which revealed the common ...
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The article discusses a report in the May 7, 2010 issue of "Science" titled "A Draft Sequence of the Neanderthal Genome," by evolutionary anthropologists at the Max Planck Institute. Topics include an overview of an evolutionary theory called reproductive isolation and genome sequencing, as part of the Max Planck study, which revealed the common ...
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Science, 2006
The Neandertal nuclear DNA sequenced to date raises the possibility that Neandertals interbred with modern humans (see main text). Now a handful of other studies are finding traces of Neandertal genes in living people. (Read more.)
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The Neandertal nuclear DNA sequenced to date raises the possibility that Neandertals interbred with modern humans (see main text). Now a handful of other studies are finding traces of Neandertal genes in living people. (Read more.)
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ACM SIGGRAPH 96 Visual Proceedings: The art and interdisciplinary programs of SIGGRAPH '96 on - SIGGRAPH '96, 1996
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Neandertals, competition, and the origin of modern human behavior in the Levant
Evolutionary Anthropology, 2003John J Shea
exaly

