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         Hominids Paleontology:     more books (48)
  1. Human Paleobiology (Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology) by Robert B. Eckhardt, 2000-10-23
  2. Adventures in the Bone Trade: The Race to Discover Human Ancestors in Ethiopia's Afar Depression by Jon Kalb, 2000-10
  3. The Human Fossil Record, Craniodental Morphology of Genus i Homo/i(Africa and Asia) (The Human Fossil Record) by Jeffrey H. Schwartz, Ian Tattersall, 2003-05-05
  4. Homo americanus, an original American species
  5. The Human Fossil Record, Brain Endocasts: The Paleoneurological Evidence, Volume 3 by Ralph L. Holloway, Douglas C. Broadfield, et all 2004-05-20
  6. Extinctions in Near Time: Causes, Contexts, and Consequences (Advances in Vertebrate Paleobiology)
  7. Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, the Unknown, and the Unknowable (Human Evolution Series)
  8. The Hunt for the Dawn Monkey: Unearthing the Origins of Monkeys, Apes, and Humans by Christopher Beard, 2004-12-20
  9. Guide to Fossil Man by Michael H. Day, 1986-10-15
  10. Establishment of a Geologic Framework for Paleoanthropology (Special Paper (Geological Society of America))
  11. Function, Phylogeny, and Fossils: Miocene Hominoid Evolution and Adaptations (Advances in Primatology)
  12. Our Earliest Ancestors by Björn Kurtén, 1993-10-15
  13. Eugène Dubois and the Ape-Man from Java: The History of the First `Missing Link' and Its Discoverer by L.T. Theunissen, 1988-12-31
  14. Lucy and Her Times (W5 Series) by Pascal G. Picq, Nicole Verrechia, et all 1997-01

41. Hominid Species
(About) More Like This. Evolution/paleontology Information and resources pertainingto evolution and paleontology. hominids had fire before leaving Africa.
http://www.blueglobus.com/kenya/cgi-bin/search/search.cgi?results&keywords=Homin

42. Chapter 22 Hominids
in paleontology. Although the fossil does not change, ideas may change or errorsmay creep in. Homo from Dmanisi, Georgia. Overview of Dmanisi hominids from
http://www.geology.ucdavis.edu/~cowen/HistoryofLife/CH22.html
Evolving Toward Humans
General links
Australopithecines
Small jaws and big brains in human evolution.
We know that modern humans have small weak jaws and big impressive brains compared with our closest living relatives, the chimps. Fossil evidence puts the transition between 2.5 Ma and 1.7 Ma, in the transition from one or other species of ...
  • University of Pennsylvania press release
    The Appearance of Homo
    Early species of Homo
  • Images of early Homo
    • This is the skull KNM-ER-1470 . It is sometimes called Homo rudolfensis , but many people put it together with Homo habilis . (If so, it may be a large male skull.) Note the "filling" between the bones. The skull could have been reconstructed in a subtly different way that would have made a difference in both appearance and interpretation. This is a common, perhaps underestimated problem in reconstructing and understanding all fossil vertebrate skulls.
    • A different photograph of ER-1470
    • This skull is KNM-ER-1813 from East Turkana . Although the Web site calls it Australopithecus africanus , the skull KNM-ER-1813 is actually put into Homo habilis by most people. It has a small skull for
  • 43. The Educational Encyclopedia, Paleontology
    echinoderm, belemnites, sponge, shark teeth, corals, bivalvia, gastropoda, shells,paleontology. Fossil hominids to provide an overview of the study of human
    http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/education/paleontologyfossils.htm
    Science Animals Biology Botany Bouw ... Resources Paleontology and fossiles Amber General overview Fossils Invertebrates Paleontology Amber Amber Baltic amber, insects, fossils spider, acarina, fossils insects, rav, harpaks, retinite, succinite, kohaku, glessum, fung chi, fossil resin, fuling, fehg, bernstein, elektron, ambra, ambre, agdsten, inclusions, palaeoentomology, fossil fishes, ammonites, trilobites, brachiopods, mollusks, echinoderm, belemnites, sponge, shark teeth, corals, bivalvia, gastropoda, shells, paleontology Amber amber is the fossilized resin of ancient trees which forms through a natural polymerization of the original organic compounds Amber web site dedicated to amber fossil resin and copal. Its paleontological significance is explored in detail. There are numerous original photographs of amber and inclusions with sections on its formation and role in human history Amber gives a green light to study of ancient life Amber: arboreal gold Amber gallery Amber home a tip Amber photos part of Fossils of New Jersey Amber: window to the past Fossils see also Dinosaurs Crinoidea Crinoids Crinoids a tip Detrich fossil company photos of spectacular fossil discoveries and details of global expeditions Echinodermata Echinoderm fossils in Kentucky echinoderms include well-known sea animals like the starfish (asteroidea), brittle stars (ophiuroidea), sea urchins and sand dollars (echinoidea), sea cucumbers (holothuroidea), and sea lilies (crinoidea)

    44. National Geographic News: Archaeology & Paleontology
    of years ago are energizing the field of dinosaur paleontology which traditionallyhas that may reshuffle the evolutionary tree of the early hominids and shed
    http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/archaeology_05.html
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    Oceans ... Climate Change Killed off Maya Civilization, Study Says The Maya were undoubtedly among the great ancient civilizations of Mesoamerica. Then, in almost an instant, a society of some 15 million people imploded. What caused their collapse? The answer, say researchers, is climate change. GO Oldest Human Footprints Found, Experts Say Scientists studying fossilized footprints etched in volcanic ash in southern Italy say they date back 385,000 to 325,000 years, making them the oldest human footprints ever discovered. Occasional handprints are also visible. Researchers speculate the track makers tried to escape a volcanic eruption. GO Dino Dung: Paleontology's Next Frontier? The notion of fossilized dinosaur dung may draw wry smiles from some. But researchers who study coprolites say these dietary waste products can tell us much about the dinosaurs. Now, if they could only get a little more respect. View the full story and a photo gallery GO Watch May Help Solve Mystery of Civil War Sub Hunley H.L. Hunley

    45. National Geographic News: Archaeology & Paleontology
    Archaeology paleontology Most Recent First. an extinct sabertoothed cat withoversize fangs, the leopard, and spotted hyena hunted and ate early hominids.
    http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/archaeology_09.html
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    Oceans ... Pulse of the Planet From a bed of volcanic ash deposited in northeastern China more than 124 million years ago, botanists have recovered impressively complete fossils of some of Earth's earliest flowering plants. The discovery of this new family of plants sheds light on the life and times of early members of an enormous category of flora, which includes flowers, trees, and many life-sustaining crops. GO Ancient Peru Torture Deaths: Sacrifices or War Crimes? Ancient skeletal remains from a Moche temple complex in northern Peru show that the victims suffered shockingly brutal deaths. Were they executed as human sacrifices to the gods, or ritually murdered as the losers in fierce power struggles between competing city-states? A National Geographic EXPLORER TV program tracks forensic efforts to find the answer. GO Earliest Known Ancestor of Placental Mammals Discovered Researchers have discovered the earliest known ancestor of the group of mammals that give birth to live young. The finding is based on a well-preserved fossil of a tiny, hairy 125-million-year-old shrewlike species that scurried about in bushes and the low branches of trees.

    46. Evolution -- Transitional Hominids
    Although some species of fossil hominids are today represented by up to Anthropologyincludes the study of human cultures, archaeology, paleontology and more.
    http://members.aol.com/darwinpage/hominid.htm
    Main Science htmlAdWH('7002737', '234', '60');
    and
    Evolution
    Links to our Past
    News of the Present
    Insight for the Future Alfred R. Wallace
    Linnean Society of London

    OR Select Any page Listed Here. Abiogenesis Cell Biology Essays Homework Aids ... Zoology
    Transitional Human Fossils
    Six Million Years of Human Ancestry
    Hominid Timelines
    Hominid Time Line A colorful family tree, fossils, tools, use of fire, genetics and natural selection. Hominid Time Chart : To 60 mybp. Primate Speciation Rise of Hominids, timeline and group descriptions. Hominid Species : from talkorigins.org TIME.com - Human Evolution Timeline Hominid Clade Tree showing an example of uncertainty of arrangement. Information on the Internet about human evolution is immense. Unfortunately, it is scattered among many sources, some of the best of which science journals require costly subscriptions to read. It is regrettable also that most of the photographic evidence that is web-available is limited to skulls. Other comparative skeletal material such as the progression of pelvises, knees, hands and feet are equally interesting but are not web-available. Rather than attempt to write a textbook on the subject, I have collected from numerous web sources significant information on a number of aspects of human evolution. The box at right, for instance, has links taking you to a variety of timeline graphics. Please visit these and try to note some of the differences in the presentations. Although some species of fossil hominids are today represented by up to 500 specimens, for many there are but a few not enough, and not complete enough in some cases, to be certain as to the position within our family tree. So there is debate within paleoanthropology about the matter healthy debate that requires more evidence before consensus is reached on all points. Also, some of the timelines do not show the latest fossil discoveries and, in a few cases, two species shown in one timeline are "lumped" together in others. See also the timeline discussion below.

    47. Evolution -- Paleontology & Fossil Record
    Horses Transitional Whales Transitional Birds Transitional hominids TransitionalVertebrate University of California Museum of paleontology Public Exhibits For
    http://members.aol.com/darwinpage/paleontology.htm
    Main Science htmlAdWH('7002737', '234', '60');
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    Evolution
    Links to our Past
    News of the Present
    Insight for the Future Alfred R. Wallace
    © Linnean Society of London
    OR Select Any page Listed Here. Abiogenesis Cell Biology Essays Homework Aids ... Zoology
    Paleontology
    The Fossil Record of Life

    Note: Authorities differ as to precise time boundaries between geologic periods. Eon Era Period Epoch While this page is about paleontology and fossils, it is also inseparably connected to geology and plate tectonics. It is impossible to understand the stratigraphic and geographic distribution of ancient life on this planet without having at least a basic knowledge of these subjects. In addition, an understanding of radiometric dating is also beneficial, although you will not have to learn much about chemistry and physics to achieve that understanding. This page is divided into two rather long sections. The first section lists all the geologic periods from most recent to most ancient. Wherever possible a series of maps is presented showing the size and position of land areas during each period. Also a small list of links is given for a description of the period and for museum and fossil exhibits related to it. The second section of this page contains a dozen or more broad topics within paleontology with a variety of links to help you explore each subject area. Those links will in turn offer you additional sources of data. A great deal about the fossil record of life is available online to help you learn. But I urge you to read a couple of books and a journal or two and, if possible, to take an introductory course in paleontology. Most colleges and universities offer them, and you can find online course material on this page. This is an exciting time in paleontology. New fossils are being reported almost daily and old, troublesome gaps in the fossil record are rapidly being filled. If you are really interested in being up-to-date subscribe to a paleontological news service.

    48. Hominids
    I shall commit an outrage against paleontology by giving short shrift to all sortsof lovely complications We refer to these new, bipedal simians as hominids.
    http://www.erasmatazz.com/library/History of Thinking/BeforeCivilization/Hominid
    The Hominids
    Our story has now gotten to about 5 million years before yesterday afternoon. I shall commit an outrage against paleontology by giving short shrift to all sorts of lovely complications and baldly stating that one group of simians started, for one reason or another, to walk on two feet instead of four. We refer to these new, bipedal simians as hominids. I will, however, address one nasty complication. The simians were never truly quadripedal in the first place. After all, they were descended from primates who lived in trees and used all four limbs for grabbing as well as locomotion. Simian hands aren't equipped with hard hooves or big pads for heavy-duty contact with the ground. So the simians were, in point of fact, neither quadripedal nor bipedal they were sort of "unpedal". Or perhaps we could say that they were simultaneously quadripedal and quadrimanual. The hominids didn't so much give up using their hands for walking as they specialized their feet to do a better job of walking. So it's best to think of the hominids as simians with greater mobility. Many people have made a big deal about how the shift to bipedalism freed the hands to do all sorts of intellectually stimulating things, such as making tools, but our simian relatives use their hands quite adeptly. It's true that bipedalism gave the hands even greater freedom, but the basic capability to use hands to manipulate objects was already in place with the simians. What really changed the hominid condition was the new combination of using hands while walking: carrying things. Chimps and apes can pick things up, and they can run pretty fast, but when they try to do both at once, they're pretty clumsy. Hominids could carry fairly large items like babies, for example around with them. Perhaps bipedalism was a response to premature birthing it's difficult to disentangle causes from effects in these matters.

    49. Search Results
    1994. Trade Paperback Subjects FOSSIL hominids HUMAN BEINGS ORIGINEVOLUTION PREHISTORIC PEOPLES SCIENCE paleontology SOCIAL
    http://www.myownbookshop.com/SearchResults.aspx?SearchType=SubjectSearch&Subject

    50. Paleontology News - Topix.net
    New Ethiopian fossil reveals dental evolution in earliest hominids AFP via KeepMedia PaleontologyMinot Daily News March 30, 2004 - The fossilized remains of
    http://www.topix.net/tech/paleontology
    Wednesday, June 9, 2004 Paleontology News Search Technology Agriculture Alternative Energy Anthropology Archaeology ... Space Improve your site Add these news headlines to your website -
    click here
    Hunting fossils in hard-hat country
    Daily Press/Sunday Press Dispatch - Thursday June 3 - Eric Scott, left, curator of paleontology at San Bernardino County Museum, and Kathleen Springer, senior curator, examine a camel bone from Daggett. See also: Science Paleontology Backward Glance by Steve Smith
    Desert Dispatch - Tuesday June 1 - I joke with interviewers and friends that Barstow is the center of the known universe. See also: Science Paleontology Barstow, CA Scientist discovers new dinosaur in Montana
    Daily Times - Tuesday June 1 - A curious piece of bone spotted by a University of Pennsylvania professor during a horseback ride in southern Montana led to the discovery of a new dinosaur with a long neck, a ... See also: Science Paleontology Ancient critters' dinner menu: glass
    When Marie Antoinette heard that citizens lacked bread, she reportedly said, "Let them eat cake." When paleontologists realized that Earth's earliest microbes lacked organic food, they ... See also: Science Paleontology Dinosaurs All Fried Within Hours, Study Concludes

    51. Fossil Hominids - An Empirical Premise Of The Descriptive
    In paleontology the original biological continuity of a species under study is Anassumption of the monotypic character of fossil hominids is gratuitous
    http://www.jezuici.krakow.pl/sj/lenart/pal01/

    52. Palaeontology In Austrian Universities
    vertebrates and invertebrates, paleobotany, micropaleontology, biostratigraphy,paleogeography, sedimentary facies and in addition paleontology of hominids.
    http://www.univie.ac.at/Palaeontologie/palaeontology in austrian unis1.htm

    53. Random Paleontology Knowledge Quiz
    Crafted by Trivia Architect whoneedsthesefacts. Category paleontology. Which ofthe following probably did NOT hunt and eat hominids during the Pliocene?
    http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz.cfm?qid=65405&origin=

    54. Query: Human Evolution Hominids Fossil
    Homo erecuts** **Homo sapiens neanderthalensis** Deciphering what early hominidsate and anth220/paleanth size 12K - 7 Dec 95 No Title Human paleontology.
    http://www.unipv.it/webbio/bahumevo.htm
    HUMAN EVOLUTION INFO
    HUMAN EVOLUTION HOME PAGES
    Human Origins Bookmarks
    Social Biology - Human Origins - FSB101. You may find the following links helpful in enlarging your understanding of Human Origins. Here is a useful account of Fossil Hominids. A more extensive source of detailed and up to date information about Human...

    http://euler.ntu.ac.uk/lsteach/origins.html
    - size 3K - 5 Dec 95
    Maqueta del servidor de JGM sobre PALEOANTROPOLOGIA

    http://www.ucm.es/OTROS/Astrof/jgm_antro.html
    - size 896 bytes - 15 Sep 95
    Handbook Links
    Handbook of Human Symbolic Evolution. Links. This page is under construction. General. General issues pertaining to evolutionary theory can be tracked down through a number of sites: http://rumba.ics.uci.edu:8080/faqs/faq-intro-to-biology.html....

    http://www.massey.ac.nz/~ALock/hbook/booklink.htm
    - size 2K - 6 Oct 95
    Nicole's AnthroPage

    http://www.wsu.edu:8000/~i9248809/anthrop.html
    - size 33K - 25 Nov 95
    IPL Anthropology
    the Internet Public Library. Anthropology Ready Reference. The study of peoples, cultures, and languages, both ancient and modern. The Ancient World Web. "This page is a compendium of Internet sites discussing, spot-lighting, or otherwise considering the...

    http://aristotle.sils.umich.edu/ref/RR/SCI/Anthro-rr.html

    55. D. Formenti's Links: PALEOANTHROPOLOGY & EVOLUTION
    HUMAN paleontology, Top(ics). **** Fossil hominids Texts Images(D.Keger), **** Hominid species info, **** Hominid Species Timeline.
    http://www.unipv.it/webbio/dfpaleoa.htm
    Dip.Biologia Animale , Pavia, IT other dba links selected directories paleoanthro links paleonews (if still there) 2000 ... anthro jobs Last updated: 8-Jun-04( 1620 days since 1-1-2000 and 890 days since euro is in our pockets) by
    Daniele Formenti
    Dip.Biologia Animale Univ.Pavia
    As internet too evolves, some links can be no more available ... Many recent links still out of order are in New links page
    OTHER DBA LINKS Top (ics) Anthropological links Primatological links Biological links World development links ... Links materiale didattico locale (password)
    SELECTED DIRECTORIES Top (ics) **** Archaeology Info *** Archaeology on the Net Anthropology *** Origins of Humankind HP Institute human origins (new) ... *** Early Human Phylogeny
    PALEOANTHRO LINKS Top (ics) *** Best acheo links *** Best Human evolution links *** Paleoanthropology Links ** Human Origins and archaeology links ... *** Paleonet
    PALEONEWS (IF STILL THERE) 2000 Top (ics) Dueling Theories of Human Evolution (2/00) Dmanisi skulls (H.ergaster?! 5/00) Dmanisi skulls (BBC) Dmanisi skulls (Sci Daily)
    PALEONEWS 2002 Top (ics) Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 2002
    PALEONEWS 2003 Top (ics) Fungo minaccia pitture Lascaux
    PALEOANTHRO SOURCES REFS Top (ics) References on Evolution of Hominid Locomotion Selected References on Human Evolution Archeo refs list (searchable) Evolution of Hominid Locomotion Bibliography ... Human evolution refs
    PALEOANTHRO FULL TEXTS Top (ics) P Direct radiocarbon dates for Vindija G1 and Velika Peina Late Pleistocene hominid remains P The early Upper Paleolithic human skeleton from the Abrigo do Lagar Velho (Portugal) FIND PALEOANTHRO BOOKS

    56. Paleontology Books - The Seashell On The Mountaintop A Story Of Scienc
    Children s Books. Internet Books. paleontology (51 books), Pg. $137.50. more infoon Mammoths, Sabertooths, and hominids. Mammoths, Sabertooths, and hominids Book.
    http://science.shoppingsavvy.com/ab-2-Paleontology-Books-The-Seashell-on-the-Mou
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    The Seashell on the Mountaintop: A Story of Science, Sainthood, and the Humble Genius Who Discovered a New History of the Earth Books
    Science Books Evolution Paleontology Science Books ... Paleontology
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    Shopping Links Poster Law Books Paintings and Posters Children's Books ... Internet Books Paleontology
    (51 books) Pg. 3 of 6 The Seashell on the Mountaintop: A Story of Science, Sainthood, and the Humble Genius Who Discovered a New History of the Earth Book The Bonehunters' Revenge : Dinosaurs, Greed, and the Greatest Scientific Feud of the Gilded Age Book Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea: One Hundred Million Years of Evolution Book Exceptional Fossil Preservation Book ... Vertebrate Life (6th Edition) Book Pg. 3 of 6 Home I About Us I I Contact Us I Help
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    57. Rocky Road: Women In Paleontology
    Women in paleontology. Until recently, opportunities for women inscience have been relatively few. The Unearthing hominids. Mary
    http://www.strangescience.net/women.htm
    Women in Paleontology
    "She Sells Seashells by the Seashore"
    This tongue-twister has a very real inspiration. The daughter of a working class English fossil collector, Mary Anning expanded her father's business after his untimely death left the family nearly destitute in the early 19th century. With an exceptional eye for fossils, she unearthed a number of spectacular finds from sediments that were deposited during the Jurassic Period. Many of Anning's grateful customers were upper class English geologists. When hard financial times dropped Anning's sales around 1830, one of those geologists, Henry De la Beche, drew a cartoon designed to inspire interest in her finds. Named Dura antiquior ("an earlier Dorset"), this lively depiction was converted to a lithograph and sold to many members of the Geological Society of London. A commercial collector, Anning was not considered a scientist, although many scientists of the time admired her work. To learn more about Mary Anning, choose Mary Anning's Biography
    A Curious Tooth on a Country Lane
    One day, as the story goes, Mary Ann Mantell accompanied her country doctor husband on a house call. While he visited his patient, she took a stroll down a country lane and found a tooth that she presented to her husband after he finished his visit. Whether this story is true can't be confirmed since Gideon Mantell later gave conflicting versions of the story. What is known is that the tooth in question led to the naming of

    58. Paleontology And Geology Glossary N
    If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not in 5 million to 1.8million years ago, when the first hominids (australopithecines) developed
    http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/dinosaurs/glossary/indexn.shtml
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    ZoomDinosaurs.com

    Dinosaur and Paleontology Dictionary A B C D ... Z
    Click on an underlined word for more information on that subject.
    If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not in the dictionary, please e-mail us
    N
    NAASHOIBITOSAURUS

    (pronounced nah-ah-sho-ee-BEE-to-SAWR-us) Naashoibitosaurus ( meaning "Naashoibito lizard") was a plant-eating dinosaur that lived during the late Cretaceous period . This hadrosaur (duck-billed dinosaur) was about 30 ft (10 m) long. A fossil (only a skull) has been found in New Mexico, USA. Naashoibitosaurus was named by Hunt and Lucas in 1993. The type species is N. ostromi . Naashoibitosaurus may be a variant of Kritosaurus navajovius. NANOFOSSIL
    Nanofossils are microscopic fossils that are very abundant, widely distributed, and time-specific (because of their high evolutionary rates). They are very useful index fossils. NANOSAURUS (pronounced NAN-oh-SAWR-us) Nanosaurus ( meaning "dwarf lizard") was a small bipedal plant-eater from the Jurassic Period (156-145 million years ago). It was about 4 feet long (120 cm) and 1.5 feet tall (46 cm). Nanosaurus is known from a jawbone found in western

    59. H- Paleontology And Geology Glossary: H
    If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not in the HOMINID hominids(family Hominidae) are the group that includes people and our close
    http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/dinosaurs/glossary/indexh.shtml
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    ZoomDinosaurs.com

    Dinosaur and Paleontology Dictionary A B C D ... Z
    Click on an underlined word for more information on that subject.
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    H
    HABITAT

    A habitat is a space (which includes food, water and shelter) suitable for the survival and reproduction of an organism.
    HADEAN EON
    The Hadean Eon lasted from 4.6 to 3.9 billion years ago. This "Rockless Eon" was the time when the Earth's continental and oceanic crusts were solidifying. The name Hadean was coined by the geologist Preston E. Cloud in the 1960s. HADROCODIUM Hadrocodium ( meaning "heavy or full head") was a tiny mammalian ancestor about the size of a paperclip. It is the earliest-known animal with such mammal-like features. This shrew-like quadruped had a long tail, a long snout, delicate teeth, three middle ear bones, a powerful jaw hinge, matching upper and lower teeth, a large brain case, and five-toed feet. Hadrocodium was an insectivore (insect-eater) that may have been nocturnal (most active at night). It lived about 195 million years ago. A skull (half an inch (12 millimeters) long) was found in the Lufeng Basin in Yunnan, China, in 1985 (it was only recently determined that it was a new species). The type species is Hadrocodium wui

    60. What Is Paleontology? - Suite101.com
    hominids, the ancestors of modern humans. Just remember that archaeologists do notstudy dinosaurs! And we see there there is so much more to paleontology than
    http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/4003/18561
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