biopalaeo.blogspot.com
Biology & Palaeontology Qs & As: July 2006
http://biopalaeo.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_archive.html
Biology and Palaeontology Qs and As. Hello, and welcome to online Biology and Palaeontology Questions and Answers. This is a special site aimed at school children and devoted to providing the best scientific information available to school kids around the UK and abroad. If you want to learn more about any aspect of biology or palaeontology then we are here to help. Tuesday, July 25, 2006. Meantime, here is your BioBlogger number 1. Dr David Hone,. Bavarian State Collection for Palaeontology, Munich.
biopalaeo.blogspot.com
Biology & Palaeontology Qs & As: November 2006
http://biopalaeo.blogspot.com/2006_11_01_archive.html
Biology and Palaeontology Qs and As. Hello, and welcome to online Biology and Palaeontology Questions and Answers. This is a special site aimed at school children and devoted to providing the best scientific information available to school kids around the UK and abroad. If you want to learn more about any aspect of biology or palaeontology then we are here to help. Monday, November 13, 2006. Will (11) from Lowestoft has a question about dinosaurs. And if so was it bigger than a T-Rex? Was actually a pack...
biopalaeo.blogspot.com
Biology & Palaeontology Qs & As: October 2006
http://biopalaeo.blogspot.com/2006_10_01_archive.html
Biology and Palaeontology Qs and As. Hello, and welcome to online Biology and Palaeontology Questions and Answers. This is a special site aimed at school children and devoted to providing the best scientific information available to school kids around the UK and abroad. If you want to learn more about any aspect of biology or palaeontology then we are here to help. Tuesday, October 31, 2006. Sam, who is 11 asked us. When did the nose evolve? But how does the evidence match up to this? I have been told th...
biopalaeo.blogspot.com
Biology & Palaeontology Qs & As: July 2006
http://biopalaeo.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_biopalaeo_archive.html
Biology and Palaeontology Qs and As. Hello, and welcome to online Biology and Palaeontology Questions and Answers. This is a special site aimed at school children and devoted to providing the best scientific information available to school kids around the UK and abroad. If you want to learn more about any aspect of biology or palaeontology then we are here to help. Tuesday, July 25, 2006. Meantime, here is your BioBlogger number 1. Dr David Hone,. Bavarian State Collection for Palaeontology, Munich.
squamozoic.blogspot.com
Squamozoic: February 2007
http://squamozoic.blogspot.com/2007_02_01_archive.html
Friday, February 16, 2007. Squamozoic, general outline. Varanids in SE Asia and Australasia, and iguanines in South America,evolve endothermy and enhanced encephalisation. Short-faced arboreal iguanines evolve increasingly complex societies and cultures from the Miocene onwards. Now, a little background and building on this staement. Prehistory and other tetrapods:. Turtles are mostly similar to the present arrangement, sea turtles are slightly more diverse, and land tortoises less so. Ratites decline in...
sinanthropus.blogspot.com
Sinanthropus: July 2010
http://sinanthropus.blogspot.com/2010_07_01_archive.html
Recent news and heretical views on the prehistory of China and related topics. Tuesday, July 27, 2010. Will the real H. floresiensis please stand-up? Well, I’m going to go off the deep end this time with what some may consider an outrageous proposal. Visions of giant rats dancing in my head have led me back to meditations on the enigmatic hobbit. Could the beloved hobbit aka Homo floresiensis. Actually be a descendant of Lufengpithecus. Posted by DAE @ 9:47 PM 0 comments. Monday, July 26, 2010. A prelimi...
sinanthropus.blogspot.com
Sinanthropus: An Old Essay That Is Still Relevant
http://sinanthropus.blogspot.com/2010/07/old-essay-that-is-still-relevant.html
Recent news and heretical views on the prehistory of China and related topics. Wednesday, July 14, 2010. An Old Essay That Is Still Relevant. Way back in 1995 I posted the following article on the web. It was a precursor to the paper I co-authored with Tracey Crummett and Milford Wolpoff on "Longgupo: Early Homo. Colonizer or late Pliocene Lufengpithecus. Survivor in south China? Implications of New Fossil Material Attributed to Plio-Pleistocene Asian Hominidae. Longgupo, Wushan, Sichuan. If accepted as ...