• The discoveries here are key pieces of evidence supporting the early florescence of modern human behaviors in Africa. (wikipedia.org)
  • Fig. 1: Proposed conceptual models of early human history in Africa. (nature.com)
  • Henn, B. M., Steele, T. E. & Weaver, T. D. Clarifying distinct models of modern human origins in Africa. (nature.com)
  • The first modern human dispersals across Africa. (nature.com)
  • The maps and descriptions of early human migration tend to neglect migrations within Africa and include arrows suggesting a general dispersion of migrants from Africa in several directions. (historycooperative.org)
  • My narrative of early human migration begins with the movement of the densest human populations from equatorial East Africa to the northern savannas of Africa. (historycooperative.org)
  • But while both geneticists and paleontologists carried on vigorous debates until each field had confirmed a widely accepted interpretation of the data-one that confirmed the "out of Africa" vision of human origins and dispersal-historical linguists have chosen not to give priority either to resolving their classificatory differences or to developing broad interpretations of human migration. (historycooperative.org)
  • A new fossil ape from an 8.7-million-year-old site in Türkiye is challenging long-accepted ideas of human origins and adding weight to the theory that the ancestors of African apes and humans evolved in Europe before migrating to Africa between nine and seven million years ago. (utoronto.ca)
  • We have no limb bones, but judging from its jaws and teeth, the animals found alongside it and the geological indicators of the environment, Anadoluvius probably lived in relatively open conditions unlike the forest settings of living great apes - more like what we think the environments of early humans in Africa were like," said Ankara University's Sevim Erol. (utoronto.ca)
  • Although African apes today are only known from Africa, as are the earliest known humans, the study's authors - which also include colleagues at Ege University and Pamukkale University in Türkiye and the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands - conclude that the ancestors of both came from Europe and the eastern Mediterranean. (utoronto.ca)
  • Sophisticated scanning technology is revealing intriguing secrets about Little Foot, the remarkable fossil of an early human forerunner that inhabited South Africa 3.67 million years ago during a critical juncture in our evolutionary history. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • In the summer of 2022, Lee Berger lost 50 pounds in order to wriggle though impossibly small openings in the Rising Star cave complex in South Africa-spaces where his team has been unearthing the remains of Homo naledi , a proto-human likely to have coexisted with Homo sapiens some 250,000 years ago. (bookpassage.com)
  • Lee Berger is an award-winning paleoarchaeologist whose explorations into human origins in Africa over the past 25 years have resulted in the discovery of more hominin fossil remains than any other. (bookpassage.com)
  • More like what we think the environments of early humans in Africa were like. (utoronto.ca)
  • This is well before modern humans evolved and migrated to Europe from Africa, meaning these ancient sailors from the Middle Pleistocene (Chibanian) period belonged to a different hominin species altogether (most likely Homo erectus , one of the more immediate ancestors of Homo sapiens ). (ancient-origins.net)
  • Featuring four life-sized tableaux of Homo ergaster, Homo erectus, Neanderthals, and Cro-Magnons, the Spitzer Hall of Human Origins shows each species in its habitat, demonstrating the behaviors and capabilities that scientists think it had. (amnh.org)
  • Stringer, C. & Galway-Witham, J. On the origin of our species. (nature.com)
  • Since the advent of Charles Darwin's Origin of Species , the literature on human origins continues to delve into the history of our species. (hubpages.com)
  • However, we contend with the irony that as a human species, we developed the most sophisticated brain structure that enabled us to shape and dictate our surroundings to suit our needs. (hubpages.com)
  • However, the lip smacks of African great apes, the closest species to humans, had never been studied. (yahoo.com)
  • Apes gesture with their limbs and bodies to communicate with other members of their species, just as we humans do. (mongabay.com)
  • But recent research on a range of species has suggested that the sorts of sophisticated cognitive skills necessary for indicative gesturing, which scientists widely consider to be the precursor to symbolic language in humans, may not have arisen solely in our closest ape relatives - and might have even older evolutionary roots than was previously believed. (mongabay.com)
  • Such indicative gestures in the context of grooming amongst individuals of the same species, the researchers note, have been reported earlier, in various primates raised by humans and even in wild chimpanzees, but never from any monkey species living in the wild. (mongabay.com)
  • But past studies have generally not examined non-ape primate species and their communicative gestures, which could help further our understanding of shared language-like capacities across the entire primate lineage and pinpoint their origins more precisely. (mongabay.com)
  • Little Foot's species blended ape-like and human-like traits and is considered a possible direct ancestor of humans. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Both are species of the genus Australopithecus but possessed different biological traits, just as modern humans and Neanderthals are species of the same genus - Homo - but had different characteristics. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Australopithecus could be the direct ancestor of Homo - humans - and we really need to learn more about the different species of Australopithecus to be able to decide which one would be the best candidate to be our direct ancestor," Beaudet said. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • There is no doubt that the human capacity to communicate through symbolism has been hugely transformative for our species. (nationofchange.org)
  • Given the phylogenetical proximity between those species, comparative research on brain specialization between a non-linguistic gestural system (i.e. in monkeys) versus a linguistic gestural systems in humans (i.e. sign language in deaf) might help evaluating the gestural continuities with language lateralization in term of manual asymmetries, structural and functional lateralization of the brain. (europa.eu)
  • When scientists discover a fossil skull, they compare it to skulls that have already been identified as particular early human species. (si.edu)
  • Moffett examines the effects of the most aggressive ants on the environment, arguing that certain invasive species resemble humans in their capacity for global conquest and environmental destructiveness. (uctv.tv)
  • The human species likes to explore new places, and we know they had visibility, they could see that perhaps there was a better place to find the resources they needed: food, water and stone," said Maria Gkioni, the lead archaeologist in the new study, in an interview with Haaratz . (ancient-origins.net)
  • What is uniquely human cognition, and what is shared with other species? (lu.se)
  • In addition to a comparative framework we also study the cognition of non-human species without explicit comp-arisons to humans. (lu.se)
  • The Hall of Human Origins offers a welcoming place to explore one of the most exciting areas of science, the study of human evolution. (si.edu)
  • This video takes you behind-the-scenes into the process of designing and building the Smithsonian's Hall of Human Origins. (si.edu)
  • The Anne and Bernard Spitzer Hall of Human Origins pairs fossils with DNA research to present the remarkable history of human evolution. (amnh.org)
  • On this episode of ID the Future , hear more from Dr. John West on why our views on human origins matter, excerpted from a recent talk he gave at a "Science and Human Origins" conference in Coeur d'Alene, ID. (idthefuture.com)
  • On this episode of ID the Future , hear a clip from a recent Science and Human Origins conference featuring biologist Richard Sternberg. (idthefuture.com)
  • The Institute of Human Origins (IHO) is a non-profit, multidisciplinary research organization dedicated to the recovery and analysis of the fossil evidence for human evolution. (wikipedia.org)
  • After finding Lucy during the "surge of discoveries" in the 1970s, Donald Johanson returned to Berkeley, California and founded the Institute of Human Origins with the mission of bridging social, earth, and life science approaches to the most important questions concerning the course, causes, and timing of events in the human career over deep time. (wikipedia.org)
  • Several direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies report how much DNA a person has inherited from prehistoric humans, such as Neanderthals and Denisovans. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Neanderthals were very early (archaic) humans who lived in Europe and Western Asia from about 400,000 years ago until they became extinct about 40,000 years ago. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Denisovans are another population of early humans who lived in Asia and were distantly related to Neanderthals. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The precise way that modern humans, Neanderthals, and Denisovans are related is still under study. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Click here for freely downloadable curriculum materials aligned to the AP learning objectives that use human case studies to teach core evolutionary principles and a resource to help teachers create a comfortable and supportive classroom environment for teaching evolution. (si.edu)
  • Ongoing IHO field work in Hadar, Ethiopia, where Lucy was found in 1974, addresses the evolution and ecology of Australopithecus (3.0-3.4 million years ago) and the origin of Homo and stone-tool making (2.3 million years ago). (wikipedia.org)
  • Since joining IHO in 2001, Curtis Marean has directed the organization's Pinnacle Point fieldwork, which is working to produce and integrate a climate, environment, and paleoanthropological sequence for the final stage in human evolution. (wikipedia.org)
  • The hall explores human biology and anatomy, traces the path of human evolution, and examines the origins of human creativity. (amnh.org)
  • On this course you'll explore the archaeology and approaches to human origins while working alongside internationally renowned specialists in early prehistoric archaeology and human evolution. (york.ac.uk)
  • They believe these mouth signals may have played a role in the evolution of a vocal system in humans that laid the foundation for speech. (yahoo.com)
  • What we now understand, summarizing rather simply, is that primate gestures appear to lie at the roots of human language evolution, [with] this hypothesis largely supported by evidence of shared neuronal and cognitive underpinnings," Gupta said. (mongabay.com)
  • The theory proposed herein explains at multiple levels - ultimately genetic but involving (1) behavioral, (2) life history, and (3) social changes - the origin and evolution of menopause in women. (frontiersin.org)
  • Yet in attempting to trace the origin and evolution of contemporary human rights law, Headley all too often, though unintentionally quite instructively, runs afoul of the Enlightenment jurist Emmerich de Vattel's warning that treatments of the law of nations are as a rule 'vague, superficial, and often even mistaken. (dissentmagazine.org)
  • JRF: Your book shows that it is more helpful to us if we consider the human story and evolution as less of a straight line and more so as one that branches in different ways across time and geography. (nationofchange.org)
  • Join Berger on the adventure of a lifetime as he explores the Rising Star cave system and begins the complicated process of explaining these extraordinary finds-finds that force a rethinking of human evolution, and discoveries that Berger calls "the Rosetta stone of the human mind. (bookpassage.com)
  • A good summary of so called human evolution. (evcforum.net)
  • The work of Ibn Khaldun is used to explore the inner logic of the rise and fall of a civilization, and the origin and evolution of human society. (islamicpluralism.org)
  • A primate research station is a powerful tool for studying the evolution, origin and structure of the human mind. (lu.se)
  • The hall also features examples of what are thought to be some of humans' earliest forms of artistic expression, including an original limestone engraving of a horse carved about 25,000 years ago in southwestern France. (amnh.org)
  • 2] Further, while only a few scholars with degrees in history have undertaken analysis of the earliest human migrations, the comprehensive methodological approach associated with world history has been important in developing new insights into early human history. (historycooperative.org)
  • In 2013, graduate student Chalachew Seyoum discovered the lower mandible known as LD 350-1, the oldest fossil from the human genus, Homo. (wikipedia.org)
  • The discovery pushed back evidence of the human genus, Homo, to 2.8 million years, ago, nearly a half-million years earlier than previously known. (wikipedia.org)
  • The hall covers millions of years of human history, from early ancestors who lived more than six million years ago to modern Homo sapiens, who evolved 200,000 to 150,000 years ago. (amnh.org)
  • Assuming these tools were left by this long extinct cousin of modern humans, it would seem that Homo erectus must have settled on the Aegean Islands hundreds of thousands of years ago. (ancient-origins.net)
  • And that means Homo erectus , an allegedly primitive precursor of modern humans that disappeared from the Earth more than 100,000 years ago , must have discovered how to build water-borne craft long before humans would have been around to come up with the idea. (ancient-origins.net)
  • In contrast to models with archaic introgression, we predict that fossil remains from coexisting ancestral populations should be genetically and morphologically similar, and that only an inferred 1-4% of genetic differentiation among contemporary human populations can be attributed to genetic drift between stem populations. (nature.com)
  • Ample archaeological and geological evidence has now been uncovered that suggests archaic humans were building boats and crossing the Aegean Sea as long as 450,000 years ago, the authors of a new article in Quaternary International report. (ancient-origins.net)
  • Determining which areas of the genome are shared with archaic humans, and which areas are different, will also help researchers find out what differentiates modern humans from our closest extinct relatives. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Some studies have suggested that certain genetic variations inherited from archaic humans may play roles in hair texture, height, sensitivity of the sense of smell, immune responses, adaptations to high altitude, and other characteristics in modern humans. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Having more or less DNA in common with archaic humans says nothing about how "evolved" a person is, nor does it give any indication of strength or intelligence. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Recent discoveries have provided much new information on the emergence and spread of modern humans. (historycooperative.org)
  • Discoveries in the fields of human origins, paleoanthropology, cognitive science, and behavioral biology have accelerated in the past few decades. (nationofchange.org)
  • One of the first things I tell my students is that in the field of human prehistory, one must grow accustomed to information that is in a constant state of flux, as it changes in pace with new discoveries that are being made on nearly a daily basis. (nationofchange.org)
  • Check out the latest human origins discoveries and research findings! (si.edu)
  • Once inside the cave, Berger made shocking new discoveries that expand our understanding of this early hominid-discoveries that stand to alter our fundamental understanding of what makes us human. (bookpassage.com)
  • There is still a lot to learn about early hominin biology," said study co-author Thomas Connolley, principal beamline scientist at Diamond, using a term encompassing modern humans and certain extinct members of the human evolutionary lineage. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Long before Jane Goodall began telling the world we would do well to study our evolutionary origins and genetic cousins, it was a well-established philosophical creed that things go better for humanity the more we try to know ourselves. (nationofchange.org)
  • This symposium explores the evolutionary origins of human imagination, its impact on the sciences and arts, the consequences of imagination impairment, and the fundamental genetic and neurological basis of human imagination. (uctv.tv)
  • This genetic information is helping researchers learn more about these early humans. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Antigenic and genetic characteristics of swine-origin 2009 A(H1N1) influenza viruses circulating in humans. (cdc.gov)
  • A gentle walking tour that explores the pre-historic origins and evidence across Wiltshire and Dorset. (newscientist.com)
  • Rees explores potential utopian and dystopian futures for humans on Earth. (uctv.tv)
  • Scientists are a step closer to understanding the origins of human speech , after analysing videos of chimpanzees smacking their lips as they communicate. (yahoo.com)
  • Instead, just like in humans, we should start seriously considering that individual differences, social conventions and environmental factors may play a role in how chimpanzees engage 'in conversation' with one another. (yahoo.com)
  • Analysis of a newly identified ape named Anadoluvius turkae, recovered from the Çorakyerler fossil site near Çankırı with the support of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism in Türkiye, shows Mediterranean fossil apes are diverse and part of the first known radiation of early hominines - the group that includes African apes (chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas), humans and their fossil ancestors. (utoronto.ca)
  • The findings establish Anadoluvius turkae as a branch of the part of the evolutionary tree that gave rise to chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas and humans. (utoronto.ca)
  • Individuals in Lower Paleolithic human populations were characterized by short lifespans with diminished late-age survival and fertility, similar to contemporary chimpanzees, and thence were subject to three changes. (frontiersin.org)
  • Plagnol, V. & Wall, J. D. Possible ancestral structure in human populations. (nature.com)
  • The percentage of Neanderthal DNA in modern humans is zero or close to zero in people from African populations, and is about 1 to 2 percent in people of European or Asian background. (medlineplus.gov)
  • However, research has shown that modern humans overlapped with Neanderthal and Denisovan populations for a period, and that they had children together (interbred). (medlineplus.gov)
  • The demand for medical products of human origin is growing with the emergence of new therapeutic applications, improved access to health care in some regions, and changing demographics of potential donor and recipient populations, such as ageing and increased burdens of chronic diseases. (who.int)
  • Sensitivity and Specificity of Serologic Assays for Detection of Human Infection with 2009 Pandemic H1N1 Virus in U.S. Populations. (cdc.gov)
  • The finding suggests that human speech has "ancient roots" in the way primates communicate , the researchers write in the journal Biology Letters . (yahoo.com)
  • Gestures in nonhuman and human primates, a landmark of language in the brain? (europa.eu)
  • Considering the strong language/gesture links in humans and the continuities between the gestural system in apes and monkeys and some language properties, we recently suggested the hypothesis of a continuity between language lateralization and asymmetry of communicative gestures in both human and nonhuman primates. (europa.eu)
  • Mapping the mental lives of nonhuman primates is part of the monumental task of defining what it means to be human. (lu.se)
  • It has traditionally been accepted that the fairly sophisticated abilities required to produce referential gestures were restricted to humans and to apes, our closest phylogenetic kin. (mongabay.com)
  • A new face and partial brain case of Anadoluvius turkae, a fossil hominine - the group that includes African apes and humans - from the Çorakyerler fossil site located in Central Anatolia region of Türkiye (photo by Sevim-Erol, A., Begun, D.R., Sözer, Ç.S. et al. (utoronto.ca)
  • The founding of the modern African open-country fauna from the eastern Mediterranean has long been known and now we can add to the list of entrants the ancestors of the African apes and humans," said Sevim Erol. (utoronto.ca)
  • A new face and partial brain case of Anadoluvius turkae, a fossil hominine - the group that includes African apes and humans - from the Çorakyerler fossil site located in Central Anatolia, Türkiye. (utoronto.ca)
  • Hunter-gatherer genomic diversity suggests a southern African origin for modern humans. (nature.com)
  • Human-capital theory plausibly explains the inverse relationship between initial earnings and earnings growth rates: the good fit between data and theory suggests that variation in initial skill transferability-not variation in the "quality" of human capital-underlies variation in initial earnings. (repec.org)
  • To this purpose, a first objective is to evaluate the continuities of manual and brain asymmetries between (1) a linguistic gestural system in humans using MRI in 100 adult native deaf French signers, and (2) a non-linguistic gestural system of adult baboons Papio anubis using 106 MRI brain images. (europa.eu)
  • The archaeology of human origins is a fascinating and dynamic area of research, with new evidence and theories constantly changing our interpretation of who we are. (york.ac.uk)
  • This article argues that evidence on language classification can and should be used systematically in interpreting early human migrations. (historycooperative.org)
  • Evidence for each hypothesis and its associated change having occurred are reviewed, and the hypotheses are combined in a synthetic theory for the origin of human menopause. (frontiersin.org)
  • The evidence shows that returns to host country sources of human capital are higher than returns to foreign human capital, reflecting the limited international transferability of the latter. (repec.org)
  • Lastly, the overall evidence confirms the presence of a strong heterogeneity in wage returns to different kinds of human capital and in the wage premium associated to the legal status as a function of the immigrants' area of origin. (repec.org)
  • Bones contain evidence of how early humans lived, died, and interacted with other organisms. (si.edu)
  • Dr. Sternberg presents evidence that refutes the myth that the human genome is full of junk DNA. (idthefuture.com)
  • In 2007, the field project opened ASU's Hadar Field School, which educates American study abroad students in field methods in human origins research. (wikipedia.org)
  • It's origin and age is unclear although one recent study has suggested an age of about 1,000 years. (newscientist.com)
  • Intricate computational analyses uncovered conserved factors governing heart-field segregation, which facilitate enhanced study of human heart development and disease in the dish. (newswise.com)
  • Information from another field of study-linguistics-has the potential to clarify the paths of early human migration. (historycooperative.org)
  • square test was used to determine whether different PCR genotypes were equally distributed among isolates of The Study bovine and human origin. (cdc.gov)
  • Beyond a conventional understanding of the study of past human societies, Ibn Khaldun sought to construct a sound synthesis for a philosophy of the humanities. (islamicpluralism.org)
  • A study of various countries by HDI map illustrates an evident disparity in human development levels globally. (who.int)
  • This is very interesting as we did not have much information about that system," Beaudet added, noting that it likely played a key role in the threefold brain size increase from Australopithecus to modern humans. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Taken together, we propose a southern African origin of anatomically modern humans with sustained homeland occupation before the first migrations of people that appear to have been driven by regional climate changes. (nature.com)
  • From the cultivation of the first crops to the founding of modern states, Origins reveals the breathtaking impact of the earth beneath our feet on the shape of our human civilizations. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • Its legs were longer than its arms, as in modern humans, making this the most-ancient hominin definitively known to have that trait. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • You can also read the "TOP HUMAN ORIGINS STORIES OF THE YEAR" blog posts written by Briana Pobiner and other members of the Human Origins Program team from 2017 , 2018 , 2019 , 2020 , 2021 , and 2022 . (si.edu)
  • The dawn of human matrilineal diversity. (nature.com)
  • While reviewing the human chronicle with its scenes of diversity, such a statement will accord with available testimonies from various texts and contexts. (islamicpluralism.org)
  • The N-terminal 216 amino acids of the mature SzM were found to exhibit a high degree of diversity, but the majority of human isolates grouped in three distinct SzM clusters. (lu.se)
  • Using microdata from the Encuesta Nacional de Inmigrantes 2007, the paper examines returns to human capital of immigrants, distinguishing between human capital accumulated in their home countries and in Spain. (repec.org)
  • A true-life scientific adventure story, this thrilling book takes the reader deep into South African caves to discover fossil remains that compel a monumental reframing of the human family tree. (bookpassage.com)
  • Dr. West draws from history and from current society to demonstrate how Darwinian theory erodes traditional beliefs about humans, and illustrates the consequences of a Darwinian perspective of human life. (idthefuture.com)
  • This work aims to develop some reflection about the construction of feminine subjectivity in psychoanalysis supported by the Original Seduction Theory or Generalized from Jean Laplanche and also the proposal from Jacques André into the origins of feminine sexuality existence. (bvsalud.org)
  • In this way, we observed that the Original Seduction Theory and the Traductive Theory of Reiterate completely modifies the way we see the unconscious foundations, the psychic system and the human psychosexuality origin, specialty, the feminity. (bvsalud.org)
  • Novel (i.e., non-human) flu viruses of zoonotic (animal origin) that have caused past human infections. (cdc.gov)
  • Zoonotic origin flu viruses that have not caused past human infection(s) but that may have the potential to cause human infections. (cdc.gov)
  • These results suggest that SzM-mediated binding of human fibrinogen is an important virulence mechanism of zoonotic S. equi subsp. (lu.se)
  • In 2014, IHO received the single largest grant dedicated to the research of human origins. (wikipedia.org)
  • The IHO Templeton Research Program is a collaborative inquiry into the evolutionary foundations of human uniqueness. (wikipedia.org)
  • The $4.9 million, three-year grant from the John Templeton Foundation is the largest of its type for human origins research, and will support 11 linked investigations of where, when, and how unique human capacities for complex cognition, cumulative culture, and large-scale cooperation emerged. (wikipedia.org)
  • Data access is permitted for non-commercial, population origins or ancestry research upon application to the South African Data Access Committee with appropriate institutional review board approval. (nature.com)
  • http://humanorigins.si.edu/research/whats-hot-human-origins What's Hot in Human Origins? (si.edu)
  • CDC conducts research on flu viruses of public health concern because most humans do not have any pre-existing immunity against them, and should these viruses gain the ability to spread efficiently among humans, they could cause a global outbreak of disease, i.e., a pandemic . (cdc.gov)
  • The researchers found that the facial gesture follows a very similar rhythm to human speech. (yahoo.com)
  • Scientists seeking to understand the origins of human language have long known that ape's communicative gestures share striking similarities with those of humans. (mongabay.com)
  • A second objective is to explore the functional brain lateralization of gestures production in baboons (versus manipulation) using non-invasive wireless Infrared Spectroscopy in 8 trained subjects within interactions with humans. (europa.eu)
  • At both evolutionary and developmental levels, the project will thus ultimately contribute to enhance our understanding on the role of gestures in the origins of brain specialization for language. (europa.eu)
  • Immerse yourself in the early human periods of the Neolithic, Bronze and Iron Ages. (newscientist.com)
  • How did early human societies work? (york.ac.uk)
  • Why have language data not been used more in interpretations of early human history? (historycooperative.org)
  • devise a protocol for induction and differentiation of human heart-field precursors, drawing on inspiration from in vivo development. (newswise.com)
  • Human germinal matrix: venous origin of hemorrhage and vascular characteristics. (ajnr.org)
  • His documentary films include Fire-Maker , Revolutionary , The War on Humans , and (most recently) Human Zoos . (idthefuture.com)
  • This information can help scientists better understand the risk these viruses pose to humans and support development of tools and strategies for prevention and treatment. (cdc.gov)
  • Chimpanzee lip smacking could help us understand where human speech came from. (yahoo.com)
  • Dartnell ( The Knowledge ), a University of Westminster science communication professor, links plate tectonics to the emergence of the first hominins in a sometimes simplistic but intriguing look at the environment's role in shaping human nature. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • The recurrent emergence of diseases, such as the recent Zika virus outbreak, requires systems of production of medical products of human origin that can predict and mitigate transmission of known or unknown pathogens and swiftly be adapted to new threats. (who.int)
  • This is not the first application of linguistic data to the interpretation of human dispersal, though I argue that this interpretation is distinct in its conclusions and more systematic in its approach than previous interpretations. (historycooperative.org)
  • Some experts have tried to make the work more accessible, but Deborah Barsky's new book, Human Prehistory: Exploring the Past to Understand the Future (Cambridge University Press, 2022), is one of the most authoritative yet. (nationofchange.org)
  • Science mavens may also be taken aback that he provides primers on some fairly basic concepts, such as ice ages and human genetics. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • O157 (EDL933) and a toxin-negative control isolate were do not appear to be equally distributed among isolates of assayed as positive and negative controls each time the bovine and human origin (7). (cdc.gov)
  • 2 were assayed, 91 isolates of bovine origin and 67 originally types among bovine isolates from different countries. (cdc.gov)
  • zooepidemicus isolates of equine and human. (lu.se)
  • zooepidemicus isolates of equine and human origins were compared with regard to SzM sequences and binding of equine and human fibrinogens. (lu.se)
  • Yet there remain major gaps in our understanding of human expansion. (historycooperative.org)
  • The finding could offer a key to understanding how human languages evolved. (yahoo.com)
  • Understanding the past is always important for an extension in the human intellect. (islamicpluralism.org)
  • The Israeli professor draws a fascinating argument by dividing human history into four major parts: the Cognitive Revolution, Agricultural Revolution, Unification, and the Scientific Revolution. (hubpages.com)
  • These four major parts of human history serve as the head topics of a well-outlined discourse on the components that Mr. Harari deems instrumental in our formation. (hubpages.com)
  • When we talk about human history, we often focus on great leaders, population forces, and decisive wars. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • However, the central project of this book-providing a geological take on human history-is well illustrated and at moments, surprising. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • Origins is a Big History, a grand synthesis that draws from many fields. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • That could mean that the roots of human language stretch even farther back into history than we thought. (mongabay.com)
  • Intellectual exercises in human history are performed in different styles, in accordance with social institutions, the manufacture of culture and geographical structures. (islamicpluralism.org)
  • For example, the HPAI A(H5) viruses identified in the United States in 2015 have not caused human infections but remain flu viruses of public health concern because of their potential to cause human illness. (cdc.gov)
  • These two viruses have caused severe illness and death in humans. (cdc.gov)
  • It precipitated war and peace, as humans developed the concept of ownership--part of the legacy of the Cognitive Revolution as we learned to think in abstract ways. (hubpages.com)