"Homo in a heteroland" Essays and Research Papers

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    Teeth Evolution

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    only one species exists today—Homo sapiens‚ or human beings. Dr. Alistair Evans and his colleagues based their study off of hominin tooth sizes while trying to figure out what rule governed the evolution and development of teeth in hominins. This study provides a development-based expectation to examine the evolution of the unique proportions of human teeth. While on their journey‚ Dr. Evans and his crew found two types of hominins: the species that we classify as Homo and australopiths. These scientists

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    species. Humans have survived for thousands of years and will most like survive thousands of more. Throughout the history of the Humanoid species man has evolved from Homo Erectus to what we today call Homo Sapiens‚ or what we know today as modern man.. The topic of this paper is what does the future have in store for the evolution of Homo Sapiens. Of course‚ human beings will continue to change culturally; therefore cultural evolution will always continue; but what of physiological evolution? The cultural

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    pangea supercontinent

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    last 570 million years that the kind of life forms we are familiar with began to evolve‚ starting with arthropods‚ followed by fish 530 million years ago (Ma)‚ land plants 475Ma and forests 385Ma. Mammals didn’t evolve until 200Ma and our own species‚ Homo sapiens‚ only 200‚000 years ago. So humans have been around for a mere 0.004% of the Earth’s history. View the Tree of Life Jump to:Geological timeline | Geological time periods | Big Five mass extinction events | Mass extinction theories | Ancient

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    Primates/Primate Behaviour 1 Assigned Reading Ch. 1 & 2 Ch. 3 & 5‚ & p. 159-160 [sexual sel.] Ch. 6 & 7 28 May 4 June 11 June 18 June 25 June 2 July 9 July 16 July 23 July 30 July Methods in Evolutionary Anthro & Archaeology Early Hominins Homo erectus and Homo floresiensis Reading week - no class

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    Altruistic Behavior

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    naturally able to read the intentions of others. Another hereditary characteristic of humans is that we have an urge to belong to groups‚ naturally. Wilson encourages altruism even further by going back to our ancestors over time; the homo sapiens‚ homo habilis‚ and homo erectus. Our ancestors through trial and error of working individually and in groups learned that working simultaneously benefited them and with that “[....] social intelligence grew‚ along with the centers of memory and reasoning in

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    A.P. World History Guided Reading 1 "The Origins of Agriculture to the First River-Valley Civilizations” TERMS:
 Culture - Socially transmitted patterns of action and expression Foragers - Hunting and food gathering people Animal domestication - The killing of animals for food Pastorialism - Way of life dependent on large herds of grazing livestock Matrilineal - Kinship with mother 

Patrilineal - Kinship with father Lineages - the holding of land by large kinship (blood relationship)

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    Becoming Human

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    N. R. Ignacio ANTH-171 Film #1 Becoming Human-First Steps Homosapiens are the most complex and adaptable animal on earth. How did we get this way? Our ancestry has evolved through millions of years. In Africa‚ a distinguishing occurrence‚ apes that stood on four legs started walking on two legs straight up. So now a fossil remain‚ a six million year old skull named Tumei could contain the secret of how human ancestry walked upright. First to speak about the significance of how humans walked

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    Binomial Nomenclature

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    name; more informally it is also called a Latin name. The first part of the name identifies the genus to which the species belongs; the second part identifies the species within the genus. For example‚ humans belong to the genus Homo and within this genus to the species Homo sapiens. The formal introduction of this system of naming species is credited to Swedish natural scientist Carl Linnaeus‚ effectively beginning with his work Species Plantarum in 1753.[1] The application of binomial nomenclature

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    SUBJECT: SOCIAL AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY TOPIC: Discuss the relationship between Individualism and Equality. COURSE: B.A (H) PHILOSOPHY In his article - Individualism and Equality‚ Andre Beteille examines the relationship between individualism and equality at the level of values. He has focussed upon explaining the works of renowned anthropologist‚ Louis Dumont and famous historian‚ Alexis de Tocqueville. He also emphasises upon their contrasting works on the tumultuous and impassive relationship

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    Swewe

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    The peopling of the Philippines: A cartographic synthesis Jean-Christophe Gaillard[1] and Joel P. Mallari[2] Abstract: This paper aims to plot cartographically the different theories proposed to explain the peopling of the Philippines. The first map locates the existing Pleistocene and Paleolithic archaeological sites while the next seven figures compile the different theories dealing with the evolution or dispersal of the Austronesian speakers. A final figure tends to summarize and formalize

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