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This webite focuses on Human Evolution, or the Evolution of man. It looks at our past and our history from an Anthropological (anthropology) point of view. We evolved from apes through many different stages including the hominid Species "Hominid" refers to members of the human family, Hominidae, which consist of all species from the point where the human line splits from apes towards present day humans. Habitual bipedal locomotion (movement on two legs), an upright position, and ...


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Home | Subsccribe | News | Shop | TV | Events | Links | Contact | Free Info | Advertise | Search A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America A New Species? July 29, 1997 by Mark Rose View of the Gran Dolina excavations in the Sierra Atapuerca of northern Spain (Javier Trueba/Madrid Scientific Films) [LARGER IMAGE] Fossils from the Gran Dolina railway cut in northern Spain's Sierra Atapuerca are from a hitherto unknown species of early human, according to the s ...


Go directly to Human Evolution activity (152K - requires Shockwave) When did humans evolve? Who are our ancestors? Why did we evolve? At the turn of the century, scientists could only dream about finding the answers to these questions. The fossilized remains of a species known as Neanderthal had been found, and there was a primitive, human-like skull that had been discovered in Indonesia. Beyond that, there was little hard evidence to work with. With the 1912 "discovery" o ...




About UsSupportersSite HelpContact UsLog-on The world's leading resource for European research news View All Science Arts Technology Health Society Humanities AlphaGalileo is:The world’s leading independent resource for European research news A fast and effective way to reach approved journalists around the world A resource for multilingual news, images and experts for the media A specialist multilingual team that reviews all content and user access ...


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Free trial issue of Athena Review Back issues of Athena Review Athena Review Vol.2, no.2: Recent Finds in Paleoanthropology Molecular clockwork and related theories Testing the basis for “Mitochondrial Eve.” Molecular clocks, a complex topic central to current debates on human evolution, first came into prominence in paleoanthropology in the 1960’s. One well-known study by Vincent Sarich and Ala ...


Africa | Antarctica | Arctic | Asia | Australia/Oceania | Caribbean | Central America | Europe | Islands of the World Middle East | North America | South America | World Atlas | WIN $100 here BAHRAIN A Brief Description Fast Facts Flag Landforms Lat/Long Links Maps Time Traveler Info Weather PRINT THIS MAP A Brief Description Long ruled by Arabs, the ancient land of Bahrain was an important trading center, dating all the way back to Roman times. It's a (small in siz ...


low graphics version | feedback | help You are in: Sci/Tech Front Page World UK UK Politics Business Sci/Tech Health Education Entertainment Talking Point In Depth AudioVideo The BBC's John Duce "Many researchers thought A. robustus was a vegetarian and incapable of using tools" real 28k Tuesday, 16 January, 2001, 03:08 GMT Ape-man ate termites They are the world's oldest-known bone tools An ape-man who lived more than a million yea ...


low graphics version | feedback | help You are in: Sci/Tech Front Page World UK UK Politics Business Sci/Tech Health Education Entertainment Talking Point In Depth AudioVideo Wednesday, 11 October, 2000, 15:13 GMT 16:13 UK DNA clues to Neanderthals Prof Stringer holds replica Neanderthal bones (Image: Natural History Museum) Scientists have analysed the DNA of a third Neanderthal in an attempt to shed light on the genetic history of early humans ...


Front Page World UK UK Politics Business Sci/Tech Health Education Sport Entertainment Talking Point In Depth On Air Archive Feedback Low Graphics Help Monday, May 3, 1999 Published at 22:40 GMT 23:40 UK Sci/Tech Early volcano victims discovered Whole populations may have been wiped out simultaneously Whole communities of ape-like creatures may have been killed in volcanic disasters that struck East Afric ...


low graphics version | feedback | help You are in: Sci/Tech Front Page World UK UK Politics Business Sci/Tech Health Education Sport Entertainment Talking Point In Depth AudioVideo Video BBC South Africa Correspondent Jeremy Vine reports real 28k Audio Jeremy Vine: There is great excitement in South Africa real 28k Thursday, 10 December, 1998, 10:24 GMT Fossil find could rewrite human history Dr Ron Clarke is excited by his ...


Home | Subsccribe | News | Shop | TV | Events | Links | Contact | Free Info | Advertise | Search A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America Case of the Curious Cranium October 20, 1999 by Angela M.H. Schuster Poloyo cranium with facial reconstruction (Vito Cannella) A rare skull of a Homo erectus from Poloyo in the Solo River area of central Java has been found among a collection of curiosities sold to a Manhattan boutique. The cranium (the maxilla and m ...


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DNA Shows Neandertals Were Not Our Ancestors For photos click here 7-11-97 University Park, Pa. -- A team of U.S. and German researchers has extracted mitochondrial DNA from Neandertal bone showing that the Neandertal DNA sequence falls outside the normal variation of modern humans. "These results indicate that Neandertals did not contribute mitochondrial DNA to modern humans," says Dr. Mark Stoneking, associate professor of anthropology at Penn State. "Neandertals are not our ancestors." ...


Early Man: Neanderthal Man (Homo neanderthalensis) In 1856 workers quarrying for limestone in the Neander Valley near Duesseldorf, Germany came across a skull and bones. In the succeeding years many other specimens were found, not only in the Neander Valley, but in countries such as France, England, Italy, Iraq and as far south as Israel. Controversy surrounded the interpretation of these fossils. German Anatomist Rudolf Virchow examined the first discovery and concluded that it was a Homo sa ...


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[ Home ] [ Order ] [ Feedback ] [ FAQs ] [ Links ] extinct museum quality skulls click on picture for larger photograph Saber Tooth Tiger Hoplophoneous American Lion Articulated T-rex T-rex in matrix Triceratops Australopithecus afarensis Australopithecus africanus Homo habilis Homo erectus Neandertal Dire Wolf Display case for Saber Tooth Tiger A afarensis (new) Neandertal (new) saber tooth tiger Smilodon californicus has been extinct for about 12,00 ...


Room 3 Human Prehistory: An Exhibition THE FIRST HUMANS Africa is the cradle of human race. Anthropologists have unearthed the oldest human skeletons in East Africa in places such as Hadar, Olduvai, Laetoli. One of the best preserved human remnants is a female skeleton found at Hadar in Ethiopia. Anthropologists assembled about 40% of the young girl that was given the nick name "Lucy". Lucy was dated between 3.6 and 3 million years ago and belongs to the Australopethicus category. HADAR ...


Frequently Asked Questions and their answers The following is a list of questions that appear frequently in the Usenet newsgroup talk.origins. Brief answers are given for each question along with a pointer to one or more relevant files. Outside links will open in new windows. What is the purpose of the talk.origins Usenet newsgroup? The purpose of the talk.origins newsgroup is to provide a forum for discussion of issues related to biological and physical origins. See the talk.origin ...


Grade 6 Projects | Other Internet Resources: Human Prehistory Ms Hos-McGrane's Grade 6 Social Studies Class Welcome to our Project: A Day in the Life A site which we studied for our project was: 'Flints & Stones' from Museum of Antiquities (Newcastle, UK) As part of the unit on human origins, my class traveled back in time 400,000 years and spent the day living with a band of Homo Erectus who were camped at Terra Amata (present day Nice, France). Here are some of their stori ...


Hominid Evolution from Australopithecus to Cro-Magnon A definitive survey of the the current state of knowledge regarding Human origins, with bibliography. The following survey and charts are copyright(c) 1997,1998 Ken Reeser, and are taken from the published and listed documents found in the bibliography. This project is not as yet complete, and the final version will contain changes to the text and the citations. I do not personally vouch for the accuracy of the information in the ...


Homo erectus The oldest findings of Homo erectus are known from east Africa, and are about 1.8 million years old. During the next 1.5 million years, H. erectus spread to north Africa, Europe and Asia. The size of the brain increased markedly from the earliest to the last members of this species. Homo erectus was the first member of the human family to use fire. The volume of the brain varied from 800 to 1200 cm3, but the hemisphaerical brain was proportionally smaller than in modern humans. List of contents in the homo erectus in asia © Palaeontological Museum, University of Oslo, Norway, 2001. [Norsk tekst] 


Early Human Phylogeny A phylogenetic tree is a graphical means to depict the evolutionary relationships of a group of organisms. The phylogenetic tree below shows one reconstruction of the relationships among early human species, as we best know them today. It is a clickable image map. To go to a species page, click on the bar below the species name, or you can choose from the text links below. The question marks in red signify debated phylogenetic (ancestor/descendent) relationships of early h ...


The Human Behavior and Evolution Society (HBES) is an interdisciplinary, international society of researchers, primarily from the social and biological sciences, who use modern evolutionary theory to help to discover human nature - including evolved emotional, cognitive and sexual adaptations. Note: If you are new to adaptationist approaches to human behavior, learn more at our Intro to the Field page. News The HBES 2006 conference will be held i ...


Images of Neandertals Since they were discovered, the general public has always wanted to know what Neandertals look like, and many artists have attempted to show us. The results have been remarkably variable, and a few of them are shown on this page. Generally, older pictures tend to show Neandertals as more ape-like and primitive, while modern depictions are more like modern humans. For more examples, see The Neandertals, Trinkaus and Shipman 1992, or In Search of the Neanderthals, Stringer ...


Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds These pages have been left in this location as a service to the numerous websites around the world which link to this content. The original authors are no longer at the University of Leeds, and the former Centre for Human Biology became the School of Biomedical Sciences which is now part of the Faculty of Biological Sciences. Lower and Middle Pleistocene - Homo erectus and Homo sapiens Dr. D.R.Johnson Homo habilis and H rudolfensis didn ...


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Search Rad Essays Beer Pong We are dedicated to helping students with their everyday College needs. If you have any questions or comments Please feel free to e-mail us @ feedback@ChuckIII.com Thanks to students like YOU! Please, Keep them coming and help us grow Back to Subjects - Anthropology NeanderthalHomo Sapiens Hybrid Implications of Neanderthal-Homo Sapiens Hybrid from the Abrigo do Lagar Velho (Portugal) In a recent excava ...


This site discusses the fossil evidence for the evolution and dispersion of modern humans, and Homo erectus, in the Asian and Australasian regions. Teaching resources and data sets are available for download, including a guide to the human skeleton. The author of this site has had more than 20 years field and museum research in the region. This site was created by Peter Brown. These pages will look best on computers with a screen gamma of 1.8. Last updated 16 November 2005, with additions to publications.. you are visitor since 1.12.98 Search WWWSearch www.une.edu.au


SITE INDEX WASHINGTON—A trail of fossilized footprints left more than 100,000 years ago by an anatomically modern human has been found on the shore of a South African lagoon. The fossils, found in a sand-dune-turned-rock dated at 117,000 years ago, are the oldest known footprints of an anatomically modern human. Full press release Lee Berger, paleoanthropologist, Johannesburg, South Africa David Roberts, geologist, Cape Town, South Africa August 14 at 11 a.m. ET Listen to the audio. (You’ll need RealAudio.™) PRESS EVENTS | FOOTPRINTS | PRESS RELEASE | MAP


Cheap Web Hosting | Free Web Hosting | Credit Card Offers | Web Hosting | Free Web Space | Web Hosting | Advertise Search the Web The Romano-British Amphora Trade to 43 A.D: An Overview James McKeown January 1999 Ancient Europe was a place quite different from that which is familiar to modern Europeans. The European hinterland - Gaul (roughly modern France), the British Isles, and the vast stretches of what is now Germany, Austria, Poland, Hungary, etc.- was peopled ...


SARC STONE AGE REFERENCE COLLECTION SARC has been developed for the teaching department of the Institute of Archaeology(I.A.K.K.) at the University of Oslo, Norway. Institutt for Arkeologi, Kunsthistorie og Konservering Available in English og Norsk SARC is a reference program containing information about the TYPOLOGY, TECHNOLOGY, RAW MATERIALS and STUDY METHODS of the Stone Age. click on icons to access sections or the master INDEX References in the text are ...










Show menu RSS feeds | Free newsletterSource: University Of Colorado At Boulder Posted: January 11, 1999Yahoo: del.icio.us: Save This Page Early Human Activity In Australia May Have Led To Animal Extinctions The earliest humans who peopled Australia some 55,000 years ago may have inadvertently disrupted the continent's food chain by burning vast areas of native vegetation, resulting in the extinction of most large animal species. Professor Gifford Miller, a geochronologist at ...


Show menu RSS feeds | Free newsletterSource: University Of Colorado At Boulder Posted: January 11, 1999Yahoo: del.icio.us: Save This Page Early Human Activity In Australia May Have Led To Animal Extinctions The earliest humans who peopled Australia some 55,000 years ago may have inadvertently disrupted the continent's food chain by burning vast areas of native vegetation, resulting in the extinction of most large animal species. Professor Gifford Miller, a geochronologist at ...


MORE SKULLDUGGERY Know your Skulls! (c) 1997 Kevin L. Callahan Bipedalism Gif animations by Andrew Mills based upon E. Muybridge (1913), Athlete, Running,Child, Crawling PLIOCENE HOMINIDS WEB CREDIT: Many of the SPECIES DESCRIPTIONS from Week Six, Hominid skullduggery, and Week Eight come from Jim Foley's outstandingThe Talk.Origins website. Ardipithecus ramidus: 4.4 MYA, East African Rift Valley (Aramis, Ethiopia). Found by Tim White from the Berkeley Institute for Human ...


The Case of the Arboricidal Megaherbivores Elin Whitney-Smith Ph.D. I have chosen to present this model of the extinctions at the end of the Pleistocene in the form of a detective story. In the traditional detective story the reader is asked to consider a wide variety of apparently unconnected clews which the detective then pulls together in a convincing story of how and why the crime was committed. This paper also asks the reader to consider a widely divergent set of facts, some of which ...


About the Human Origins Program The Hall of Human Ancestors What's Hot! in Paleoanthropology Frequently Asked Questions Summary of Human Origins Have a Question for Our Researchers? Acknowledgments | Links to Related Sites | Feedback | Site Map/Contents Page Last Update: June 2004 © 2000 Smithsonian Institution. All rights reserved.


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The page that you were seeking at faculty.washington.edu/wcalvin has moved to the server at WilliamCalvin.com to whose homepage you will soon be forwarded.William H. Calvin SEATTLE, WASHINGTON 98195-1800 USA



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