Results 181 to 190 of about 9,896 (242)
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Connective Tissue Research, 2002
Teeth have a very significant place in paleoanthropology. Their number is one of the keys of the primate taxonomy and classification. They have been used for systematics, phylogeny, paleobiology, or paleoenvironment. Some examples are given on the use of dental formula, morphology, wear or microwear, and biogeochemistry in paleoanthopologic studies.
Louis, de Bonis, Laurent, Viriot
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Teeth have a very significant place in paleoanthropology. Their number is one of the keys of the primate taxonomy and classification. They have been used for systematics, phylogeny, paleobiology, or paleoenvironment. Some examples are given on the use of dental formula, morphology, wear or microwear, and biogeochemistry in paleoanthopologic studies.
Louis, de Bonis, Laurent, Viriot
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Theory in Biosciences, 2005
The biotic world is self-evidently "packaged" into units, of which the most basic is the species. It is necessary to develop an accurate understanding of what species are and how they are to be identified before we can proceed to more complex analyses of the evolutionary histories and relationships of extinct and extant taxa at all levels of the ...
Ian, Tattersall, Kenneth, Mowbray
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The biotic world is self-evidently "packaged" into units, of which the most basic is the species. It is necessary to develop an accurate understanding of what species are and how they are to be identified before we can proceed to more complex analyses of the evolutionary histories and relationships of extinct and extant taxa at all levels of the ...
Ian, Tattersall, Kenneth, Mowbray
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PaleoAnthropology, Vol. 2023 No. 1 (2023): PaleoAnthropology
2023Paleoanthropology Society Meeting Abstracts, Portland, OR, 28–29 March 2023...133-159 Obituary of Randall Keith White (1952-2022)...128-130 Obituary of William Jungers...126-127 Obituary: A Personal Tribute to Jakov Radovcic...122-125 Obituary of Professor Yves Coppens (09 August 1934-22 July 2022)...119-121 Book Review of Tropical Forests in the Deep ...
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Digital data collection in paleoanthropology
Evolutionary Anthropology, 2015Understanding patterns of human evolution across space and time requires synthesizing data collected by independent research teams, and this effort is part of a larger trend to develop cyber infrastructure and e‐science initiatives. At present, paleoanthropology cannot easily answer basic questions about the total number of fossils and artifacts that ...
Denne Reed +2 more
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PaleoAnthropology, Vol. 2023 No. 2 (2023): PaleoAnthropology
202313th Annual Meeting of the European Society for the study of Human Evolution Abstracts Aarhus, 21-22 September 2023...274-408 Introduction to the Special Issue...160-163 Book Review of Diet, Activity, and Social Practice. Addressing Everyday Life in Human Skeletal Remains...272-273 Obituary of Sally McBrearty (1949-2023)...268-271 Obituary: In Memory ...
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Delimitating species in paleoanthropology
Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews, 2014Evolutionary biologists created a large twentieth‐century literature about delimiting biological species. Paleontologists contributed the unique complications of deep time. Toward century's end, one participant wrote: “In all probability more paper has been consumed on the questions of the nature and definition of the species than any other subject in ...
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Concha Bullosa in Paleoanthropological Material
2016Concha bullosa is a variant of the sinonasal anatomy in which the middle nasal turbinate contains pneumatized cells, which leads to turbinate enlargement. The reason for concha bullosa formation is unclear, but the variant is seen in up to half the modern population and it may predispose to paranasal sinusitis.
Aleksandra, Gawlikowska-Sroka +7 more
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Computer-assisted paleoanthropology
Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews, 1998Paleoanthropologists are confronted by a steadily growing number of fossil specimens exhibiting diversity in both apparent morphology and state of preservation. Studying this material to answer phylogenetic and functional questions requires extensive qualitative assessment accompanied by quantitative evaluation of large volumes of data.
Christoph Peter Eduard Zollikofer +2 more
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Paleoanthropology and Neoanthropology
Chinese Sociology & Anthropology, 1988Paleoanthropology is also known as human paleontology; it is the science that studies the origins and development of the human race.
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