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         Paleoanthropology:     more books (100)
  1. Handbook of Paleoanthropology: Vol I:Principles, Methods and Approaches Vol II:Primate Evolution and Human Origins Vol III:Phylogeny of Hominids (v. 1)
  2. The First Humans: Origin and Early Evolution of the Genus Homo (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)
  3. American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)
  4. Paleoanthropology by Milford H. Wolpoff, 1998-06-01
  5. Dental Perspectives on Human Evolution: State of the Art Research in Dental Paleoanthropology (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)
  6. Asian Paleoanthropology: From Africa to China and Beyond (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)
  7. God-Apes and Fossil Men: Paleoanthropology of South Asia by Kenneth A. R. Kennedy, 2000-09-08
  8. Anthropology Without Informants: Collected Works in Paleoanthropology by L. G. Freeman, 2009-05-31
  9. The Evolution of Hominin Diets: Integrating Approaches to the Study of Palaeolithic Subsistence (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)
  10. Debating HumanKind's Place in Nature; 1860-2000: The Nature of Paleoanthropology by Richard G. Delisle, 2006-02-05
  11. The fossil evidence for human evolution;: An introduction to the study of paleoanthropology (The Scientist's library. Biology and medicine) by Wilfrid E. Le Gros Clark, 1955
  12. Paleoanthropology: Morphology and Paleoecology (World Anthropology) by Russell H. Tuttle, 1975-11
  13. Views of the past: Essays in old world prehistory and paleoanthropology (World Anthropology) by Leslie G. (ed). Freeman, 1978
  14. Hominin Environments in the East African Pliocene: An Assessment of the Faunal Evidence (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)

1. The Paleoanthropology Society Home Page
Bringing together physical anthropologists, archaeologists, paleontologists, geologists, and other Category Science Social Sciences Organizations......paleoanthropology Meetings Phoenix, 2003. The preliminary program and abstractsare now available. paleoanthropology Journal. Call for papers.
http://www.paleoanthro.org/
Paleoanthropology Meetings - Phoenix, 2003 The preliminary program and abstracts are now available. PaleoAnthropology Journal Call for papers NSF's Human Origins Program Update/Announcement GSA symposium to honor Glen Goodfriend Details Book Sale SMU Press warehouse sale
IASHP Congress Announcement The 5th Congress of the International Association for the Study of Human Paleontology, to be held in Barcelona - Sitges
on June 21-28, 2003.
Announcement - English French Spanish
For more information - see their web site
www.farmanews.com/iashp2003

If you did not receive an e-mail notification and would like to be incorporated to their database for future mailings please contact alejan@bio.ub.es
INQUA Meeting Announcement Congress web site . Visit this site to register your interest in the Congress and find out more about the location, scientific program, and field trips.
Peer Reviewed Social Science Site (This site requires
or IE version 5.0 or later)

2. Becoming Human: Paleoanthropology, Evolution And Human Origins
Arizona State University's Institute for Human Origins reviews four million years of human evolution Category Science Biology Evolution Human......An extensive, informationrich online destination for paleoanthropology.The site includes an interactive documentary, educational
http://www.becominghuman.org/
The site offers an extensive, information-rich online destination for paleoanthropology. The site features a wide range of resources, including: BECOMING HUMAN
A broadband documentary experience hosted by renowned paleo- anthropologist Donald Johanson. Journey across four million years to uncover the origins of our species.
A section covering the latest news in paleoanthropology, including expert answers to your questions. RESOURCES
A growing collection of web sites, an extensive bibliography, and a thorough glossary. LEARNING CENTER
The Learning Center offers lesson plans and interactive educational activities related to human origins.

3. Paleoanthropology Research Station: The Anthropology And Archaeology Of Human Be
Tools for understanding the anthropology and archaeology of human behavior and biological evolution.
http://www.paleoanthropology.org/
Paleoanthropology Adaptation Anthropology Award ... Home Please enter a query.
Welcome to paleoanthropology.org
The goal of Paleoanthropology.org is to provide a comprehensive portal or research station for the study of human evolution. Paleoanthropology is the subset of anthropology that is most directly concerned with the human evolution and adaptation. As a discipline, Paleoanthropology is multidisciplinary, bringing together researchers from diverse specialties. Researchers interested in Paleoanthropology include physical anthropologists, archaeologists, paleontologists, geologists, evolutionary psychologists and others who work to shed light on human behavioral and biological evolution. Paleoanthropology Resources: Anthro.Net: a research tool for anthropologists, archaeologists and other social scientists. The Leakey Foundation : a society commited to research related to human origins, behavior and survival. The Paleoanthropology Society : A multidisciplinary organization with the central goal is to bring together a range of other researchers whose work relates to hominid behavioral and biological evolution.

4. PaleoAnthropology - A Short Journey Through Time
Human Evolution the Hominid Timeline
http://www.geocities.com/palaeoanthropology
If you can read this message, then maybe it's about time you downloaded a frames compatible browser from either
or
Microsoft

5. Paleoanthropology In The 1990's
A series of fifteen essays about the most recent findings in the study of human origins and evolution.
http://www.jqjacobs.net/anthro/paleo/
Paleoanthropology in the 1990's
Essays by James Q. Jacobs
Australopithecus garhi New Species of Hominids Ardipithecus ramidis Australopithecus anamensis The Earliest Homo ... Homo antecessor The Human Origin Debate Recent African Genesis Multiregional Evolution Population Bottlenecks Paleoanthropology Essays The Dawn of Prehistoric Rock Art Reflections on the Style-Function Debate Australia's Oldest Human Remains Reflections on the Origins of Scavenging and Hunting ... A Comparison of Chimpanzee and Human Behaviors The essays, organized as a series, present some of the most important findings in paleoanthropology during the 1990's. You can use the image links in the table below, and in each page, to move through the series of articles.
Use the Paleoanthropology in the 1990's banners to return to this page. The articles begin with the descriptions of four new species of hominids and the discovery of a very early Homo specimen associated with tools. Summations of three important articles in the modern human origins debate follows. The last seven diverse essays are followed by a page of
Paleoanthropology Links

WORLD WIDE WEB HUBS BY THE AUTHOR:
Home
Anthropology Rock Art Photo Galleries ... Art
Your comments, etc. are appreciated.

6. Paleoanthropology Links
paleoanthropology Links. paleoanthropology in the 1990's, by James Q. Jacobs;paleoanthropology a short journey through time, by Lorraine Dallmeier;
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/links.html
Paleoanthropology Links
Last updated: Dec 31, 2002
General Neandertals Museums Fossils ... Creationists
General
Neandertals

7. Redirect
Archaeologist James Q. Jacobs provides several essays on human evolution. He discusses physical evidence and controversial issues.
http://www.geocities.com/archaeogeo/paleo
Paleoanthropology in the 1990's
Essays by James Q. Jacobs
This site has moved to: http://www.jqjacobs.net/anthro/paleo/index.html You will be redirected.

8. PaleoAnthropology Journal
paleoanthropology. Coeditors. Harold Dibble. University of Pennsylvania. Hdibble@sas.upenn.edu.Karen Rosenberg. University of Delaware. Krr@udel.edu. Editorial Board.
http://www.paleoanthro.org/journal_board.htm
PaleoAnthropology
Co-editors
Harold Dibble University of Pennsylvania Hdibble@sas.upenn.edu Karen Rosenberg University of Delaware Krr@udel.edu
Editorial Board
Nicholas Ashton British Museum Nashton@british-museum.ac.uk David Begun University of Toronto Begun@chass.utoronto.ca Francesco D’Errico Universit de Bordeaux f.derrico@iquat.u-bordeaux.fr David Frayer University of Kansas frayer@ku.edu Jean-Michel Geneste SRA, Conservation de la grotte de Lascaux jean-michel.geneste@culture.gouv.fr Paul Goldberg Boston University paulberg@bu.edu Donald Henry University of Tulsa donald-henry@utulsa.edu Peter Hiscock Australian National University peter.hiscock@anu.edu.au Erella Hovers Hebrew University hovers@h2.hum.huji.ac.il Curtis Marean Arizona State University curtis.marean@asu.edu Shannon McPherron UNC at Greensboro mcpherron@uncg.edu Yoel Rak Tel Aviv University anatom10@post.tau.ac.il

9. Evolutionary Psychology Index
Evolutionary Theory, paleoanthropology, and Adaptationism resources, with a primer by Leda Cosmides and John Tooby, Center for Evolutionary Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara. Includes chapter abstracts from 'The Adapted Mind' (1992), 'Mapping the Mind' (1994), and 'Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology' (1998).
http://cogweb.english.ucsb.edu/EP/
Evolutionary Psychology Evolutionary Theory, Paleoanthropology, Adaptationism
(revised 30 September 2001; search engine Introduction Bibliography Evolutionary Theory Bibliography

10. ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY PAGES By James Q. Jacobs
Archaeology related articles and galleries by James Q. Jacobs, covering archaeogeodesy, prehistory, paleoanthropology, the Andes, Mesoamerica, American Southwest and rock art.
http://www.jqjacobs.net/anthro/
A N T H R O P O L O G Y P A G E S
by James Q. Jacobs
Paleoanthropology Linguistics
The Andes
Mesoamerica ... Rock Art
Recent Articles
Teotihuacan Mural Art: Assessing the Accuracy of its Interpretation The Paleoamericans:
Issues and Evidence Relating to the Peopling of the New World
Paleoamerican Origins: ...
A Review of Hypotheses and Evidence Relating to the Origins of the First Americans
Watch this space. Paleoanthropology in the 1990's Australopithecus garhi New Species of Hominids Ardipithecus ramidis Australopithecus anamensis The Earliest Homo ... Homo antecessor The Human Origin Debate Recent African Genesis Multiregional Evolution Population Bottlenecks Paleoanthropology Essays The Dawn of Prehistoric Rock Art Reflections on the Style-Function Debate Australia's Oldest Human Remains Reflections on the Origins of Scavenging and Hunting ... A Comparison of Chimpanzee and Human Behaviors Language and Culture Articles The following papers were written for an Arizona State University class entitled Language and Culture (ASB 481) and taught by Dr. Elizabeth Brandt. The first two were chosen as model papers.

11. Paleoanthropology
Review the speculative history of primates in the human family. Includes Australopithecines, Homo habilis, Homo erectus and archaic Homo sapiens.
http://cogweb.english.ucsb.edu/EP/Paleoanthropology.html
Paleoanthropology Hominid Family History (revised 1 September 2002)
Contents See also Paleoanthropology in CogWeb's bibliography Introduction: The Hominid Family top The terminology of our immediate biological family is currently in flux; for an overview, see a current hominoid taxonomy . The term "hominin" refers to any genus in the human tribe (Hominini), of which Homo sapiens (modern man) is the only living specimen. We don't have to go too far back into the past, however, to find relatives (cf. "We Were Not Alone," SciAm Jan 2000). Discounting abominable snowmen, yeti, bigfoot, and other merely rumored possible members of our family, we know that only 28,000 years ago Neanderthals still thrived in Europe. More surprisingly, recent evidence (see below ) suggests that a member of even longer standing, Homo erectus , who first appears in the fossil record nearly two million years ago, may have continued to inhabit the island of Java as recently as ten thousand years ago, or into historical times.

12. Recent Developments In Paleoanthropology
Recent Developments in paleoanthropology. Here is a selection of recentdiscoveries and other developments in paleoanthropology
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/recent.html
Recent Developments in Paleoanthropology
These pages use a fairly conservative naming system. In recent years a number of changes have been suggested in the classification of hominid fossils. Many people are now using the genus name Paranthropus , originally given to robustus , to refer to the robust australopithecines ( robustus boisei , and aethiopicus ). This change makes sense if all these species form a clade (all of the species descended from a common ancestor) but it is not yet known if this is the case. Homo habilis is a controversial species, with much disagreement over which specimens belong in habilis , and which do not. A number of scientists now use the name H. rudolfensis to refer to ER 1470 and some similar fossils. The smaller habilis -like specimens such as ER 1813 and ER 1805 are variously assigned to habilis H. ergaster , or to another as yet unnamed species. The name H. microcranous has been proposed for ER 1813, but is never used. Wood and Collard (1999) have argued on theoretical grounds that H. habilis

13. Carol V. Ward
paleoanthropology, hominoid biomechanics, and Miocene radiation of apes (University of Missouri).
http://rcp.missouri.edu/carolward/index.html
Associate Professor
Department of Anthropology

[back to Anthropology Faculty list
University of Missouri-Columbia

Ph.D., 1991, The Johns Hopkins University Email
WardCV@missouri.edu
Updated course info: See Teaching
Office

105 Swallow Hall
phone 573-882-5407
fax 573-884-5450 Mailing Address
University of Missouri-Columbia Department of Anthropology 107 Swallow Hall Columbia, MO 65211 Research Publications Resources Collaborations and Student Opportunities ... University of Missouri-Columbia revised: spring 2002 © The Curators of the University of Missouri Contact Web Editor Web Credits

14. Iceage
Studies of glaciers, Quaternary geology, paleoclimatology, paleooceanography, and paleoanthropology.
http://iceage.umeqs.maine.edu/
Welcome to iceage at UMaine Current Research GES 591 COLOR="#0000AF"> Introduction to Meteorology and Climatology course outline readings IQCS Field Trip The Wednesday Seminar Series "Icebergs in the Southern Ocean" -photo by Terry Hughes, March 2000

15. WELCOME TO THE UF ISOTOPE GEOCHEMISTRY HOME PAGE
s of facilities and current research, faculty biographies, and contact information.......Devoted to measuring isotopic variations in natural and manmade materials, and to improvement in isotopic analytical techniques. Four primary research areas are paleoclimatology, paleoanthropology, crust-mantle evolution, and geochronology.
http://www.geology.ufl.edu/isotopehome.html

16. Damn Opinionated Lorraine
This diverse site includes information about Lorraine, paleoanthropology, aliens, and poetry.
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/5317/

Home
Me Journal Links ... Resume
Welcome to my World
What's new?
Hammering bits of old wood , update on the job prospects and Lorraine's date.
Lorraine shares her views on the looming war.
A potential job on the horizon?
NEW!! Read about the reality of climate change and the ecological meltdown our world is currently facing.
NEW!!! Check out Lorraine's photos of her friends at UEA - Parts One Two and Three
NEW!! Lorraine updates her resume . Please employ her. Preferably somewhere nice and sunny like Sydney.
visitors since about 1996 ladallmeier@yahoo.com

17. BayArea.net - California's Finest Regional Provider. Delivering The Internet And
Guide provides brief descriptions of Homo habilis, Homo erectus and several species of Australopithecus. Find comments on vestigial anatomy. paleoanthropology. Comments This is the way it is folks!
http://www.bayarea.net/~aponte/paleo.htm
Page Not Found O ur apologies...
The document you requested does not exist on this server or cannot be served. Please double check the URL or use the search function on this page to find what you are looking for. If you know you have the correct URL but are encountering an error, please let our Webmaster know at webmaster@bayarea.net Thank you. - 404 Not Found -
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18. Redshift's Home Page
Contains stars, guitars, and paleoanthropology.
http://users.infoconex.com/redshift/
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19. Paleoanthropology Links
. paleoanthropology Links. Talk Origins is a newsgroup devoted to biological andphysical origins. Recent Developments in paleoanthropology, Talk Origins.
http://www.jqjacobs.net/anthro/paleo/paleo_links.html
Paleoanthropology Links
The Institute of Human Origins (IHO). The Lucy Page at IHO. A Brief Bibliography of Human Evolution . Compiled by Eric Meikle, IHO. Hadar Bibliography , important scientific publications dealing with the site. IHO.
Talk.Origins Archive
. Talk Origins is a newsgroup devoted to biological and physical origins.
Recent Developments in Paleoanthropology
, Talk Origins. 2000.
Hominid Species
at the Talk Origins Archive. 2000.
The Evolution of the Hominids

The MCC Hominid Journey , the story of human origins.
Athena Review, Molecular clockwork and related theories.
DNA Tests: Humans Not Descended from Neanderthals
Georgia Homo erectus Crania
. Archaeology. 2000.
Fossil Hominids: Reading List by Jim Foley.
Long Foreground Student Module Prominent Hominid Fossils Selected References on Human Evolution and Paleoanthropology. NOVA In Search of Human Origins: Parts One Two Three The Leakey Foundation . A nonprofit committed to increasing scientific knowledge and public understanding of human origins. WORLD WIDE WEB HUBS BY THE AUTHOR: Home Anthropology Photo Stock Art ... Classes Your comments, etc. are appreciated.

20. Davis A. Young, The Antiquity And The Unity Of The Human Race Revisited -- Chris
Christian geologist, Davis A. Young presents paleoanthropology evidence for the antiquity of humans. He asks if God used evolution to make humans.
http://www.asa3.org/ASA/resources/CSRYoung.html
The Antiquity and the Unity
of the Human Race Revisited
Davis A. Young
Department of Geology, Geography, and Environmental Studies
Calvin College
Grand Rapids, Michigan 49546 [From Christian Scholar's Review XXIV :4, 380-396 (May, 1995)]
Reprinted in electronic form by permission. If the data in Genesis 4 are correlated with the cultural setting of the Neolithic Revolution in the ancient Near East about 8000 to 7500 B.C., then the biblical representation of Adam as Cain's immediate father suggests that Adam and Eve lived only about 10,000 years ago. The fossil record of anatomically modern humans, however, extends at least 100,000 years before the present. There are at least three solutions to this dilemma. All three alternative solutions pose difficult exegetical or theological challenges that result either in a refinement of the doctrine of original sin or a significant departure from traditional historical readings of Genesis 2-4 Davis A. Young, professor of geology at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan, examines and evaluates these solutions from both a scientific and biblical-theological perspective.
"The fundamental assertion of the Biblical doctrine of the origin of man is that he owes his being to a creative act of God."

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