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Geotimes September 2007 Kathryn Hansen |
Controversy in the Cradle of Humankind East Africa indeed has much heritage to protect, as the region has been a hotspot for paleoanthropologists trying to understand the evolutionary relationships between early hominins since at least the 1950s. |
Geotimes June 2006 Megan Sever |
Found: One of Many Missing Human Links Researchers working in Ethiopia recently uncovered bones and teeth from one of many previously missing links in the hominid family tree. The newly found remains, researchers say, connect two well-known hominid species that are separated by 1 million years. |
Real Travel Adventures May 2010 Neely & Neely |
Olduvai Gorge Archeological Site of Leakey's Discoveries Louis and Mary Leakey came to this site in 1923 and spent most of the next 70 years here, finding fossils 150 million years old, stone tools, animal and human signs. |
Geotimes May 2005 Megan Sever |
Inside the "Hobbit's" Head After studying the miniature hominid's skull and models of its brain, paleoanthropologists have determined that the Indonesian find is indeed a new species, not a Homo sapiens with a brain abnormality. |
Scientific American December 2006 |
Old Baby in the New Media The news of Selam, the discovery of a tiny being born 3.3 million years ago, was able to spread rapidly due to digital media. Just how is this digital age affecting publishing and research presentation. |
Geotimes December 2006 |
Top Paleontology News Stories of 2006 Filling in hominid gaps... On the hominid migration trail... Probing into fossil details... Evolution back in schools?... etc. |
Smithsonian November 2006 |
Wild Things: Life as We Know It The Dinosaurs Are Coming!... Timeworn Tot... It's a Snap... Observed... Listening to Luna... |
Geotimes September 2005 Megan Sever |
Footprints Push Back American Migration A newly found set of human footprints in Mexico is suggesting that people were in the Americas much earlier than previously thought -- 30,000 years earlier. |
Scientific American September 2009 |
Fossils for All: Science Suffers by Hoarding Paleontologists are overly possessive of human fossils. Science -- and the public -- suffers as a result |