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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. Paleontology And Geology Glossary N
If the dinosaur or paleontology term you are looking for is not in the when the first hominids (australopithecines) developed, modern forms of whales
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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

42. California Wild Summer 1999 - Interview With Maeve Leakey
Meave Leakey now heads the paleontology division at the National Museums of Kenya Meave Leakey The earliest hominids we have are probably the ones from
http://www.calacademy.org/calwild/1999summer/stories/leakey.html
The Magazine of the CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES CURRENT ISSUE SUBSCRIBE ...
CALIFORNIA WILD
Interview
The Latest Leakey Searches for Our Earliest Ancestors
A Conversation with Meave Leakey
California Wild editor Keith Howell. Keith Howell: What is the earliest evidence we have for hominid evolution? Meave Leakey : The earliest hominids we have are probably the ones from Ethiopia that Tim White [at the University of California at Berkeley] found at Aramis [assigned to Ardipithecus ramidus ]. He hasn't published his material yet, so it's not quite clear whether they are hominid or hominoid. KH: What is the distinction between those two? ML: They are generally considered to be hominids when they're bipedal, so that bipedality is the adaptation that defines a hominid. Tim, in his original publication, said that he thought that he had a hominid, but he didn't have terribly good evidence. I generally say that the material from Kanapoi, at 4.1 million years, is the oldest secure evidence of hominids. The ancestors of apes and humans are hominoids. So hominoids are found before the ancestral lines that led to modern African apes and us diverged.

43. Physical Evidence Of Creation
derived largely from the findings of paleontology , anthropology , and genetics Humans and their immediate ancestors, known as hominids, are notable
http://www.crystalinks.com/evolution.html
Physical Evidence of Creation
The Theory of Evolution states that modern man evolved from the ape family. This can not be verified as the 'missing link' has not as yet been found. There is no conclusive evidence to prove that man evolved from apes. Footprints of modern man have been found side by side with dinosaur tracks. Archeological evidence exists that contradicts this theory of 'the origin of man'. Modern human artifacts have been found in all layers of geological strata some going back hundreds of millions of years. These artifacts prove that modern man may be million of years older than history tells us. Paleontology
Evolution
A concept that embodies the belief that existing animals and plants developed by a process of gradual, continuous change from previously existing forms. This theory, also known as descent with modification, constitutes organic evolution. Inorganic evolution, on the other hand, is concerned with the development of the physical universe from unorganized matter. Organic evolution, as opposed to belief in the special creation of each individual species as an immutable form, conceives of life as having had its beginnings in a simple primordial protoplasmic mass (probably originating in the sea) from which, through the long eras of time, arose all subsequent living forms. Early Theories Evolutionary concepts appeared in some early Greek writings, e.g., in the works of Thales, Empedocles, Anaximander, and Aristotle. Under the restraining influence of the Church, no evolutionary theories developed during some 15 centuries of the Christian era to challenge the belief in special creation and the literal interpretation of the first part of Genesis; however, much data was accumulated that was to be utilized by later theorists.

44. Exn.ca's Hominids: The Dating Game
When did we take the leap from ape to twolegged walking hominids? In theearly days of geology and paleontology - the late 1700s - scientists used what
http://exn.ca/hominids/datinggame.cfm
Browse exn.ca SCIENCE TODAY Webisodes Skylights Objects of Desire Discovery Challenge Fact or Fiction Mind Bender Numbers Game YAFI TECHNOLOGY Computers Objects of Desire The Science of Cars HUMANITY Human Genome Forensics How to be Human Science of Sports The Sex Files ANIMALS Animal Tracks Endangered Species Audubon's Birds Cats Dogs Deadly Bugs Dinosaurs Bears Sharks! Snakes Raisinig the Mammoth African Animals Arctic Animals Asian Animals Australian Animals North American Animals FLIGHTDECK SPACE Astronomy Canada in Space Doom Hubble Mars Mir Skylights Space Shuttle Apollo 11 ISS Liberty Bell 7 Science of Star Trek StarDust Star Wars ENVIRONMENT Avalanche Cold Drought Earthquake Earth Tones El Nino Floods Global Warming Hurricane Lightning Tornado Tsunami National Parks Urban Jungle Volcanoes HISTORY Ancient Egypt Ancient Mummies Hominids Liberty Bell 7 Mystic Places Napoleon's Lost Fleet Titanic Tales ABOUT US Newsletter Contests Link To Us Producer's Guide Archive Site Map TV SCHEDULE Program Guide Daily Listings Weekly Grid Door to Door Audience Relations Explore the origins of man with exn.ca

45. Nat' Academies Press, Tempo And Mode In Evolution: Genetics And Paleontology 50
Tempo and Mode in Evolution Genetics and paleontology 50 Years After McHenry,HM (1988) New estimates of body weights in early hominids and their
http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309051916/html/184.html
Read more than 3,000 books online FREE! More than 900 PDFs now available for sale HOME ABOUT NAP CONTACT NAP HELP ... ORDERING INFO Items in cart [0] TRY OUR SPECIAL DISCOVERY ENGINE Questions? Call 888-624-8373 Tempo and Mode in Evolution: Genetics and Paleontology 50 Years After Simpson (1995)
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Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-x Early Life, pp. 1-2 Tempo, Mode, the Progenote, and the Universal Root, pp. 3-24 Phylogeny from Function: The Origin of tRNA Is in Replicati..., pp. 25-40 Disparate Rates, Differing Fates: Tempo and Mode of Evoluti..., pp. 41-62 Proterozoic and Early Cambrian Protists: Evidence for Accel..., pp. 63-84 Macroevolution, pp. 85-86 Late Precambrian Bilaterians: Grades and Clades, pp. 87-108 The Role of Extinction in Evolution, pp. 109-124 Tempo and Mode in the Macroevolutionary Reconstruction of Da..., pp. 125-144 Morphological Evolution Through Complex Domains of Fitness, pp. 145-166 Human Evolution, pp. 167-168

46. Nat' Academies Press, Tempo And Mode In Evolution: Genetics And Paleontology 50
Tempo and Mode in Evolution Genetics and paleontology 50 Years After from this clade next with A. afarensis as a sister species to all later hominids.
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309051916/html/170.html
Read more than 3,000 books online FREE! More than 900 PDFs now available for sale HOME ABOUT NAP CONTACT NAP HELP ... ORDERING INFO Items in cart [0] TRY OUR SPECIAL DISCOVERY ENGINE Questions? Call 888-624-8373 Tempo and Mode in Evolution: Genetics and Paleontology 50 Years After Simpson (1995)
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CHAPTER SELECTOR:
Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-x Early Life, pp. 1-2 Tempo, Mode, the Progenote, and the Universal Root, pp. 3-24 Phylogeny from Function: The Origin of tRNA Is in Replicati..., pp. 25-40 Disparate Rates, Differing Fates: Tempo and Mode of Evoluti..., pp. 41-62 Proterozoic and Early Cambrian Protists: Evidence for Accel..., pp. 63-84 Macroevolution, pp. 85-86 Late Precambrian Bilaterians: Grades and Clades, pp. 87-108 The Role of Extinction in Evolution, pp. 109-124 Tempo and Mode in the Macroevolutionary Reconstruction of Da..., pp. 125-144 Morphological Evolution Through Complex Domains of Fitness, pp. 145-166 Human Evolution, pp. 167-168

47. Berkeley Book List: Evolutionary Biology And Paleontology
Berkeley Book List Evolutionary Biology and paleontology (Needless to say,they didn t find the hominids, but they found great dinosaurs, which to some
http://books.berkeley.edu/2003/evobiology.shtml
UC Berkeley
Anthropological Archaeology

Astronomy

Biology (eclectic)
...
Social Theory

Select one All stories by date economics Campus news Education Environment Events at Berkeley International affairs People Science Social science Students engineering
Berkeley Book List: Evolutionary Biology and Paleontology
Kevin Padian, professor, Integrative Biology; curator, Museum of Paleontology National Geographic Dinosaurs, Paul Barrett, National Geographic Society, 2001 Digging Dinosaurs, John R. Horner and James Gorman, Workman, 1988 The Seashell on the Mountaintop: A Story of Science, Sainthood, and the Humble Genius Who Discovered a New History of the Earth, Alan Cutler, Dutton, 2003 The Politics of Evolution: Morphology, Medicine, and Reform in Radical London, Adrian Desmond, University of Chicago Press, 1989

48. Science -- Science Collections: Paleontology
paleontology Debating Extinction Timothy F. Flannery Science 283 182183. Endocranial Capacity of Early hominids Science 283 8r. Summary
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/collection/paleo?page=49

49. Science -- Science Collections: Paleontology
paleontology Cuts at Dino Monument Anger Researchers Erik Stokstad Science 298724a. Glasnost for hominids Seeking Access to Fossils Ann Gibbons
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/collection/paleo?page=23

50. Laura Lee News - Fossils May Be Earliest Human Link
a doctoral candidate in paleontology at the University of California at The Ardipithecus hominids at that time also appeared to live in woodlands.
http://www.lauralee.com/news/fossillink.htm
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Fossils May Be Earliest Human Link By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD New York Times Fossil fragments classified as Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba at the National Museum of Ethiopia. The hand at the bottom right holds a fragment of collar- bone. Scientists say the presence of primitive dental and bone characteristics in the fossils indicates that the species might be the ancestor of both chimpanzees and humans. In Ethiopian fossil hunter has found the bones and teeth of forest- dwelling creatures who lived as much as 5.8 million years ago, a discovery that appears to challenge some assumptions of early human evolution and extend knowledge of the family tree back close to its roots. The fossils are the remains of creatures who apparently walked upright. They are more than one million years older than any other fossils definitively established as those of hominids, the group of species that includes humans, their direct ancestors and close relatives. The new find, described in today's issue of the journal Nature, is especially intriguing to paleontologists because the bones appear to be so primitive and apelike and their ages, 5.2 million to 5.8 million years old, put them close to the fateful evolutionary split between the lineage leading to modern humans and the one that produced chimpanzees. Molecular biological studies indicate that the divergence occurred 5.5 million to 6.5 million years ago.

51. Evolution: Glossary
bipedalism Of hominids, walking upright on two hind legs; more generally, usingtwo legs for Author of two books on paleontology for young people.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/glossary/
Glossary A B C D ... Z
acquired trait:
A phenotypic characteristic, acquired during growth and development, that is not genetically based and therefore cannot be passed on to the next generation (for example, the large muscles of a weightlifter).
adaptation: Any heritable characteristic of an organism that improves its ability to survive and reproduce in its environment. Also used to describe the process of genetic change within a population, as influenced by natural selection
adaptive landscape: A graph of the average fitness of a population in relation to the frequencies of genotypes in it. Peaks on the landscape correspond to genotypic frequencies at which the average fitness is high, valleys to genotypic frequencies at which the average fitness is low. Also called a fitness surface.
adaptive logic: A behavior has adaptive logic if it tends to increase the number of offspring that an individual contributes to the next and following generations. If such a behavior is even partly genetically determined, it will tend to become widespread in the population. Then, even if circumstances change such that it no longer provides any survival or reproductive advantage, the behavior will still tend to be exhibited unless it becomes positively disadvantageous in the new environment.
adaptive radiation: The diversification, over evolutionary time, of a

52. Field Studies/Tanzania
the geology and paleontology of the fossil hominid locality of Laetoli in The site is important because it has yielded a number of fossil hominids,
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/anthro/grad/tanzania.htm

Graduate Program

NYCEP

Special Resources

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anthropology homepage
Paleoanthropological Field Studies
Laetoli, Tanzania
Resources and Facilities in Physical Anthropology
top Rufus D. Smith Hall
25 Waverly Place
New York, NY 10003 telephone: 212.998.8550
fax: 212.995.4014
anthropology@nyu.edu
top of page anthropology homepage

53. Paleontology - Updated April 2 1999
paleontology and Archaeology Humans and earlier hominids left their remainsall over the world, including islands that are not an easy swim from any
http://www.geocities.com/sunkenciv/paleontology.html
March 9 1999 This category contains sources that could be more tangential, but would include the great antiquity of homo sapiens and other hominids as well as other paleontological and archaeological topics. I'm not a Theosophist or follower of Theosophy, but I have no hostility toward those views even though I reject them. This category will contain conventional as well as controversial sources. I eliminated the little-used separate Archaeology page and put its two entries here (Feb 10 1999). See the new Catastrophism section in the Bookshop See the new Miscellaneous section in the Bookshop for additional titles. At a local bookstore I noticed Earth Under Fire; Humanity's Survival of the Apocalypse by Paul LaViolette . It was in the Metaphysics section. It pertained to a pre-cataclysm civilization so it looked like it might be interesting. I'll be looking for a used copy at some point in the future, but the first thing I noticed was his reference to Atlantis as a metaphor - the ice ages were ending, and there were great waves from the melting ice which were remembered as great armies invading everyone. How tiresome. Another uniformitarian take on a catastrophic event. In another chapter, in reference to the K-T boundary events, LaViolette wrote that for most of the species that perished at that point "extinction was terminal." Do tell. The dust jacket claims that the author is a scientist who made some predictions about high energy gamma rays that have since proved true. This book seems to be quite disappointing.

54. Dino Land's Travels In Paleontology: Lungamente Vive Il Dinosaurio In Italia.
It was here where my father led us to the first paleontologyrelated stop on that hominids evolved due to selective pressure in an island environment.
http://www.geocities.com/stegob/italy.html
DINO LAND TRAVELS IN PALEONTOLOGY LUNGAMENTE VIVE IL DINOSAURIO IN ITALIA By Steve Brusatte Italy's first dinosaur discovery-Scipionyx, the amazing little theropod with organ imprints! Lungamente vive il dinosaurio il Italia? For those of you who understand Italian, you realize that this means "long live the dinosaur in Italy." How can this be? The boot country’s first reported dinosaur discovery in its long history was announced earlier this year, and its second was just found in Trieste, a city near the Yugoslav border. Despite the fact that the history gluttoned Italians boast only two dinosaur discoveries (although the first, Scipionyx, is complete with rare organ imprints) they love the terrible lizards-and paleontology in general, that is. This last July I had the exciting opportunity to visit Italy. My parents were married 20 years ago, in 1979, and for an encore of their original European honeymoon they planned a trip to Spain. This fell through, which worked out for the better, as we were able to travel to the land of our cultural heritage-Italy. From the second I heard about the trip I was destined to make the anniversary trip-which I was lucky to be taken along on-into a full-fledged paleontological extravaganza! Although I didn’t get to accomplish every goal, the trip provided a worthwhile experience in paleontology! On July 15 my family and I left Chicago’s O’Hare Airport (where, by the way, you are able to view a cast of the Field Museum’s Albertosaurus skull if you are lucky enough to maze through the busy crowds and long lines to find it). 8 hours later we landed in Zurich, Switzerland. In our one day in Zurich I decided not to drag my family to any dinosaur exhibits, but instead to wait a bit, for a few days, until we reached Florence. Instead, the wait lasted much shorter than I expected, and it was my father, not me, who noticed the first paleontological hot spot.

55. Defender's Guide To Science And Creationism: V: Paleontology
Defender s Guide to Science and Creationism V paleontology RESPONSE Theevolution of humans from nonhuman hominids is actually one of the best
http://www.vuletic.com/hume/cefec/5.html
Defender's Guide to Science and Creationism:
Section V: Paleontology Mark I. Vuletic Last updated 13 September 2005
Introduction
Are there such things as transitional forms? Should there be more fossils? These are issues I take up in this section, which complements section IV
Index of creationist claims
There are no transitional forms between fish and amphibians. There are no transitional forms between amphibians and reptiles. There are no transitional forms between reptiles and mammals. There are no transitional forms between reptiles and birds. ... Fossils are the remains of the organisms that perished in Noah's Flood.
Analysis
: ASSERTION: There are no transitional forms between fish and amphibians. RESPONSE:
(i) The crossopterygian fish Eusthenopteron is linked to the early amphibian Icthyostega by a number of characteristics:
  • Eusthenopteron has the same pattern of skill bones as Icthyostega Eusthenopteron has internal nostrils, which are found only in land animals and sarcopterygians (a greater taxonomic group encompassing lungfish and crossopterygians). Eusthenopteron has teeth like those of amphibians.

56. Essays About Genetics & Paleontology - 194-006
essays writing essays about Genetics paleontology - all essay topics. The Phylogenetic Relationships of African hominids The Cladistic Verses the
http://www.essay-search-engine.com/categories/194-006.html
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Page 7 of 9 [Previous] [Next] The Ediacaran Biota of the Precambrian: A Separate Kingdom or The Ancestors of Modern Animals
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A 10 page overview of the Ediacaran Biota, an assemblage of fascinating organisms first discovered in the fossil record in 1946. Describes the ongoing controversy as to whether these organisms belonged to the Animal Kingdom or comprised their own previously undescribed kingdom. Presents the ancillary question that if these organisms were indeed animals did they die out in the Precambrian or are they actually the ancestors of modern day animals. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Filename: PPfossil.wps

57. Read About Paleontology At WorldVillage Encyclopedia. Research Paleontology And
paleontology. Everything you wanted to know about paleontology but had no clue of animals with backbones, including fossil hominids (paleoanthropology).
http://encyclopedia.worldvillage.com/s/b/Paleontology

Culture
Geography History Life ... WorldVillage
Paleontology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
A paleontologist carefully chips rock from a column of dinosaur vertebrae. Paleontology (palaeontology is the British spelling) is the study of the developing history of life on earth, of ancient plants and animals based on the fossil record , evidence of their existence preserved in rocks . This includes the study of body fossils , tracks, burrows, cast off parts, fossilized feces coprolites "), and chemical residues. Contents 1 Overview
2 Notable paleontologists

3 Research

4 See also
...
edit
Overview
Modern paleontology sets ancient life in its contexts, by studying how long-term physical changes of global geography (" paleogeography ") and climate (" paleoclimate ") have affected the evolution of life, how ecosystems have responded to these changes and have changed the planetary environment in turn, and how these mutual responses have affected today's patterns of biodiversity . So paleontology overlaps with geology , the study of rocks and rock formations, and with botany biology zoology , and ecology , fields concerned with living creatures and how they interact.

58. LIST OF PALAEONTOLOGICAL RECORDS
paleontology. D MANISI. Biostratigraphy and Paleoenvironment The nearby rivergravels provided hominids with extensive lithic resources (pebbles and
http://www.dmanisi.org.ge/paleontology.htm
PALEON TOLOGY D M A N I S I Biostratigraphy and Paleoenvironment The associated vertebrate fauna from Dmanisi points to a latest Pliocene - early Pleistocene age assignment. The complete list of species in Dmanisi includes : The following taxa; Struthio dmanisensis, Ochotona cf. largerli, Hypolagus brachygnatus, Apodemus dominans, Kowalskaia sp., Cricetus sp., Mimomys tornensis, Mimomys ostramosensis, Parameriones cf. obeidiensis, Gerbillus sp., Marmota sp., Canis etruscus, Ursus etruscus, Martes sp., Megantereon megantereon, Homotherium crenatidens, Panthera gombaszoegensis, Pachychrocuta perrieri, Archidiskodon meridionalis, Equus stenonis, Dicerorhinus etruscus etruscus, Gazella borbonica, Soergelia sp., Dmanisibos georgicus, Cervus perieri, Eucladocerus aff. senezensis Cervidae cf. Arvernoceros, Dama nesti, and Paleotraginae are indicative of the Late Villanian (MN17) and Early Biharian Mammal Ages, whose temporal range in Europe is considered to span from about 2.0 to 1.5 . It is important that small mammal association from Dmanisi, which includes

59. Fossils Of Kentucky
The Evolution of Man evolution and paleontology of hominids; Hooper VirtualPaleontological Museum. Complexity and Organic Evolution somewhat technical
http://www.uky.edu/KGS/coal/webfossl/pages/fossillinks.html
Links to Other Fossil Sites
Useful Paleontology Links
Fossil Key Links: Kentucky Geological Survey's annotated links to the best fossil Web sites. Earth History Key Links: Kentucky Geological Survey's annotated links arranged by important times in earth history. Dinosaur Key Links: Kentucky Geological Survey's annotated links to the best dinosaur Web sites. The University of California Museum of Paleontology [MUST SEE; very nice educational site for fossils organized by type and age] Learning from the Fossil Record [has lots of activities for teaching; Paleontological Society] Ecology Past [dioramas and ancient environments; St. Louis Science Center] Life Over Time [The Field Museum's exhibit on life through the ages] Hooper Virtual Paleontological Museum Kentucky Paleontological Society
Paleontology Museums:
Evolution, Phylogeny, etc.:

60. Ethnic NewsWatch Subjects (Thesaurus)
hominids. ANTHROPOLOGY (ORGANIC EVOLUTION). Evolution. paleontology. Anthropology.ANTHROPOLOGY (PREHISTORIC MAN). hominids. Prehistoric era. Anthropology
http://training.proquest.com/trc/splash/enw/en/thes.htm
What's New Timeline Publication Information Subjects (Thesaurus) ... Close Window
Softline Subjects - ProQuest Vocabulary Terms A through C
A-C D-G H-L M-R ... Download PDF The Softline subject headings have been mapped to the ProQuest vocabulary. This table provides the Softline parent/child term and the corresponding ProQuest vocabulary terms you will need to employ in your searching. Use the Find capability on your browser to locate the term you are accustomed to using (Control F or Edit - Find (on this page) in Internet Explorer). In some cases terms are no longer treated as subjects, but have been switched to either geography or company/organization. That information is clearly noted.
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    Use SUB(Identification documents) AND SUB(Aliens) AND SUB(Immigration) Former Softline Term - ENVIRONMENT (OCEAN)
    Use SUB(Oceans) AND SUB(Ecosystems) AND SUB(Environment)
AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL Agriculture AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL (DAIRY) Dairy industry Dairy productsquickly Agriculture AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL (DOMESTIC ANIMALS) Animals Agriculture AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL (FARMING) Farming Agriculture AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL (FIELD CROPS) Crops Agriculture AGRICULTURE/AGRICULTURAL (FRUITS)

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