palabrasocialista.org
sc-2041
http://palabrasocialista.org/sincensura-5/2000/sc-2041.html
Las herramientas de piedra más antiguas no son humanas. Unos 150 artefactos de piedra han sido datados en 3,3 millones de años atrás, unos 700.000 años antes de la aparición de nuestro género. Una enigmática mezcla con rasgos de australopiteco y humano moderno. Las arqueólogas Sonia Harmand, Hélène Roche y sus colegas de Francia, Kenia y Estados Unidos presentan en el artículo principal de Nature. Los hallazgos del Proyecto Arqueológico del Oeste de Turkana. Con rasgos intermedios entre austrolopiteco y ...
blogs.ei.columbia.edu
Upcoming Scientific Fieldwork, 2015 and Beyond
http://blogs.ei.columbia.edu/2015/03/10/upcoming-scientific-fieldwork-2015-and-beyond
News from the Earth Institute. Upcoming Scientific Fieldwork, 2015 and Beyond. March 10, 2015. Click on the image to see a map detailing Earth Institute fieldwork. Whenever logistically feasible, journalists may join expeditions. The Earth Institute press office keeps this list continuously updated, and can provide video and still images for many projects. To see where our scientists work, check out our interactive world map. Last updated: Sept 11, 2015. Will travel for several weeks with colleagues thro...
popular-archaeology.com
Straddling the Evolutionary Divide | Popular Archaeology - exploring the past
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/summer-2015/article/straddling-the-evolutionary-divide
The Popular Archaeology Discovery Edition e-Book. Adventures in Digital Archaeology. Adventures in Digital Archaeology. Vol 19 Summer 2015 - Print the Summer 2015 Issue. Straddling the Evolutionary Divide. Thu, Jun 11, 2015. Two remarkable sites are shedding light on a critical transitional period in human evolution. Ust west of Lake Turkana in northwestern Kenya, the rocky, arid terrain of the desert badlands, like a southern New Mexico landscape, can wear a hiker down very quickly. To post your comments.
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