What moves us? How mobility and movement are at the center of human evolution [0.03%]
什么促使我们前进?移动性和运动是人类进化的核心
Steven L Kuhn,David A Raichlen,Amy E Clark
Steven L Kuhn
Movement is central to the survival of all free-living organisms. Consequently, movement and what anthropologists often refer to as mobility, which is the sum of small-scale movements tracked across larger geographic and temporal scales, ar...
A (Disney) world of archeology: Highlights of the 81(st) annual SAA meeting [0.03%]
考古(学)的迪士尼世界:美国考古学会第81届年会综述
Jennifer L Everhart,Jennifer R Jones
Jennifer L Everhart
Rachel F Perlman,Abigail C Nishimura,Carrie S Mongle et al.
Rachel F Perlman et al.
John F Hoffecker,Scott A Elias,Dennis H ORourke et al.
John F Hoffecker et al.
Until recently, the settlement of the Americas seemed largely divorced from the out-of-Africa dispersal of anatomically modern humans, which began at least 50,000 years ago. Native Americans were thought to represent a small subset of the E...
Christopher H Parker,Earl R Keefe,Nicole M Herzog et al.
Christopher H Parker et al.
Members of genus Homo are the only animals known to create and control fire. The adaptive significance of this unique behavior is broadly recognized, but the steps by which our ancestors evolved pyrotechnic abilities remain unknown. Many hy...
Richard J Smith
Richard J Smith
Bonnie Sumner
Bonnie Sumner
Fifth annual meeting of the European society for the study of human evolution [0.03%]
第五届欧洲人类进化研究协会年会
Alexandra Daniela Uhl,Susan M Mentzer,Andrew W Kandel et al.
Alexandra Daniela Uhl et al.
James D Pampush,David J Daegling
James D Pampush
Although modern humans are considered to be morphologically distinct from other living primates because of our large brains, dexterous hands, and bipedal gait, all of these features are found among extinct hominins. The chin, however, appea...