Article Results (Showing 1 - 7 of 7) RSS Alert
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Lucy goes walkabout; the travels of a celebrated fossil highlight the vitality of Ethiopian paleoanthropology
The world's most famous hominid fossil has taken up temporary residence (until next April 20) at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, as the star...
Natural History, 10/01/07 by Ian Tattersall · More from publication -
Reflections of our past: how human history is revealed in our genes.(General)(Book Review)

RELETHFORD, JOHN H. Reflections of our past: how human history is revealed in our genes. xi, 257 pp., maps, figs., tables, bibliogr. Oxford,...
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 06/01/04 by Tattersall, Ian · More from publication -
Africa: continent of origins
It has been pointed out many times that every human group in the world today has its own origin myths. Indeed, if there is one cultural universal,...
African Arts, 03/22/04 by Ian Tattersall · More from publication -
Stand and deliver: why did early hominids begin to walk on two feet?
Ask any paleoanthropologist what got humankind started on its unique evolutionary trajectory, and the reflex answer will almost certainly be "the...
Natural History, 11/01/03 by Ian Tattersall · More from publication -
Science versus religion? No contest
Why do some (only some) of those with profoundly felt religious beliefs feel threatened by aspects of the very science that has brought them the...
Natural History, 04/01/02 by Ian Tattersall · More from publication -
Commentary: iodine and Neandertals.

Pity the poor Neandertals. For they, alone among all extinct hominids known--some twenty species by now--have regularly been singled out for...
Geographical Review, The, 01/01/02 by Ian Tattersall · More from publication -
A Hundred Years of Missing Links
So many fossil hominids have been discovered since 1900 that they now constitute an embarrassment of riches. So many fossil hominids have been...
Natural History, 12/01/00 by Ian Tattersall · More from publication


