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Phylogenetic implications of the regio orbito-temporalis in embryonic mammalsKlutzny, Simone January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Eutherian-specific gene TRIML2 attenuates inflammation in the evolution of placentationZhang, Xuzhe January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Sr Isotope Evidence for Population Movement Within the Hebridean Norse Community of NW ScotlandMontgomery, Janet, Evans, J.A., Neighbour, T. 09 June 2009 (has links)
No / The excavation at Cnip, Isle of Lewis, Scotland of the largest, and only known family cemetery from the early Norse period in the Hehrides, provided a unique opportunity to use Sr isotope analysis to examine the origins of people who may have been Norwegian Vikings. Sr isotope analysis permits direct investigation of a person's place of origin rather than indirectly through acquired cultural and artefactual affiliations. Sr isotope data suggest that the Norse group at Cnip was of mixed origins. The majority were consistent with indigenous origins but two individuals, of middle-age and different sex. were immigrants. They were, however, not from Norway but were raised separately, most probably on Tertiary volcanic rocks (e.g. the Inner Hebrides or NE Ireland) or, for the female, on marine carbonate rocks.
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Isotopic Evidence for Dietary Variability in the Early Hominin Paranthropus robustusLee-Thorp, Julia A., De Ruiter, D., Passey, B., Sponheimer, M.B. January 2006 (has links)
No / Traditional methods of dietary reconstruction do not allow the investigation of dietary variability within the lifetimes of individual hominins. However, laser ablation stable isotope analysis reveals that the ¿13C values of Paranthropus robustus individuals often changed seasonally and interannually. These data suggest that Paranthropus was not a dietary specialist and that by about 1.8 million years ago, savanna-based foods such as grasses or sedges or animals eating these foods made up an important but highly variable part of its diet.
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Phylogenetische Untersuchungen an Schädeln der Neuweltaffen (Platyrrhini) / Phylogenetic investigations of skulls of the New World monkeys (Platyrrhini)Wiesemüller, Bernhard 27 January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Molecular evolution of primates - featuring mobile elements / Molekulare Evolution der PrimatenOsterholz, Martin 22 October 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Vom Aussterben bedroht oder anpassungsfähig? - Der Koboldmaki <i>Tarsius dianae</i> in den Regenwäldern Sulawesis / Endangered or Adaptable? - The Dian's Tarsier <i>Tarsius dianae</i> in Sulawesi's RainforestsMerker, Stefan 06 May 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Small Vertebrates of the Bidahochi Formation, White Cone, Northeastern ArizonaBaskin, Jon Alan January 1975 (has links)
Two taxa of amphibians, five taxa of reptiles, and eighteen taxa of mammals were collected by screen-washing sediments from the upper Bidahochi Formation at White Cone peak, northeastern Arizona. Five new species of mammals were recovered. They include Perognathoides bidahochiensis (Heteromyidae), Bensonomys yazhi (Cricetidae), Bensonomys bradyi (Cricetidae), Paronychomys alticuspis (Cricetidae), and Martes (Plionictis) repenningi (Mustelidae). Bensonomys yazhi and Bensonomys bradyi are close to the stem of Central and South Americal hesperomyine radiation. The radiation began in the southwest United States and Mexico during the Hemphillian. The middle member of the Bidahochi Formation is dated at 6.7 m. y. by a basalt from Roberts Mesa. The paleomagnetic data and the White Cone local fauna support this middle Hemphillian date.
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The Influence of Spatial Attention on Neuronal Receptive Field Structure within Macaque Area MT / Der Einfluss von räumlicher Aufmerksamkeit auf die Struktur rezeptiver Felder im superior-temporalen Kortex des RhesusaffenWomelsdorf, Thilo 04 November 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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