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         Hominids Paleontology:     more books (59)
  1. Our Earliest Ancestors by Björn Kurtén, 1993-10-15
  2. Bones of Contention: A Creationist Assessment of Human Fossils by Marvin L. Lubenow, 2004-10-01
  3. Evolution of the Human Diet: The Known, the Unknown, and the Unknowable (Human Evolution Series)
  4. The Human Fossil Record, Craniodental Morphology of Genus Homo (Africa and Asia) (Volume 2) by Jeffrey H. Schwartz, Ian Tattersall, 2003-05-05
  5. The Past in Perspective: An Introduction to Human Prehistory by Kenneth L. Feder, 1995-12
  6. Peninj: A Research Project on Human Origins (1995-2005) (AMERICAN SCHOOL OF PREHISTORIC RESEARCH MONOGRAPH) by Luis Alcala, Manuel Dominguez-Rodrigo, et all 2010-12-31
  7. Establishment of a Geologic Framework for Paleoanthropology (Special Paper (Geological Society of America))
  8. Lucy and Her Times (W5 Series) by Pascal G. Picq, Nicole Verrechia, et all 1997-01
  9. Hominin Environments in the East African Pliocene: An Assessment of the Faunal Evidence (Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology)
  10. The Hunt for the Dawn Monkey: Unearthing the Origins of Monkeys, Apes, and Humans by Christopher Beard, 2004-12-20
  11. From Lucy to Language: Revised, Updated, and Expanded by Donald Johanson, Blake Edgar, 2006-10-17
  12. The Human Fossil Record, Brain Endocasts: The Paleoneurological Evidence, Volume 3 by Ralph L. Holloway, Douglas C. Broadfield, et all 2004-05-20
  13. Extinctions in Near Time: Causes, Contexts, and Consequences (Advances in Vertebrate Paleobiology)
  14. The Lehner Mammoth site, Southeastern Arizona (University of Arizona. Program in Geochronology, contribution) by Emil W Haury, 1959

41. Killer Cats Hunted Human Ancestors
Larry D. Martin, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Kansas doesthe modern lion, which is a serious potential threat to modern hominids.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/01/0102_020107maneater.html
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Sponsored in part by
Killer Cats Hunted Human Ancestors Shaun Smillie in Johannesburg
for National Geographic News
May 20, 2002
Three South African scientists believe they have identified several predators that preyed upon human ancestors millions of years ago. The potential hominid killers include Megantereon, an extinct saber-toothed cat with oversize fangs, the leopard, and spotted hyena. Archaeologists Julia Lee-Thorp and Nikolaas van der Merwe of the University of Cape Town, and paleontologist Francis Thackeray of the Transvaal Museum in Pretoria, South Africa, believe these carnivores were stalking and killing early hominids on the South African savanna 2.5 million years ago. Analysis of fossilized teeth indicates that leopards have been preying on humans and human ancestors for at least 2.5 million years. Hominids living in what is today South Africa all those years ago had to dodge not only leopards but also now-extinct predators such as saber-toothed cats and giant hyenas.
Art by Daniel Giraud Elliot/Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia/CORBIS
More News

Diary of the Planet
The Environment Travel National Geographic Today Special Series Digital Lifestyles: feature by Sony EarthPulse National Geographic Out There ... Mount Everest Expedition Tracking the Past with Tooth Enamel Carbon 13 concentrations are higher in grasses than in trees and shrubs.

42. Discoveries Breathe New Life Into Human Origins Debate
This Story Archaeology paleontology. Related Sites Stories. Neither sidedisputes that hominids once emerged from Africa, colonizing Eurasia.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/01/0111origins.html
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Sponsored in part by
Discoveries Breathe New Life into Human Origins Debate Jennifer Mapes for
National Geographic News

January 11, 2001
Homo erectus found by Alan Walker and Richard Leakey, Lake Turkana, Kenya is the most complete Homo erectus ever found.
Photograph by Kenneth Garrett More News
Diary of the Planet

The Environment
Travel National Geographic Today Special Series Digital Lifestyles: feature by Sony EarthPulse National Geographic Out There ... Mount Everest Expedition Where did humans come from? With the help of modern science, this deceptively simple question has brought about myriad debates regarding the origin of modern humanity. The two strongest origin theories seem incompatible, yet each continues to return evidence backing their own theory. The most recent discoveries fall on the side of those who argue the latter. The two studies, published separately by Australian and U.S. scientists, examine two types of evidence: DNA and anatomical. Both studies, say the scientists, show that modern humans could not have evolved from a single African source. SEARCHING FOR THE FIRST HOMO SAPIENS Neither side disputes that hominids once emerged from Africa, colonizing Eurasia.

43. 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
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.

44. Paleontology And The First Primates
the study of fossils is paleontology, done by paleontologists most paleontologistsstudy hominids (the lineage leading to humans) appeared at the start of the
http://members.aol.com/anth201/20102f16.htm
Introduction to Biological Anthropology: Class 16 Origin of humans: Paleontology and the first primates
  • So far, we have seen how evolution works in general, and how it has shaped our closest relatives, the non-human primates Now we will shift gears again, and look at the direct evidence of how our own kind evolved
      we want to know basically two things
        the sequence of steps that led from some kind of animal in the past to modern humans and the evolutionary reasons for each one of those steps
          why would our quadrupedal ancestors evolve into bipeds? why would they develop language? ... etc.
        this is still an active field, with many questions left to be resolved
      this direct evidence comes from paleontology
        the study of fossilized animal and plant remains
          for animals, usually bones occasionally, other body parts and evidence of them
        usually, when an animal or plant dies, the bones and other parts of a dead animal or plant rot, weather, and decay away
          under some rare circumstances, bones can be preserved as fossils the most common form of fossil is formed when the organic material gradually dissolves away and is replaced by minerals that crystallize out of ground water this creates a rock in the exact shape of the bone which is then very durable, and may last long enough to be found and studied

45. Lots Of Essays On Genetics & Paleontology - 194-006
Papers On Genetics paleontology Page 7 of 9. The Phylogenetic Relationships ofAfrican hominids The Cladistic Verses the Molecular Data Approach send me
http://www.1to1essays.com/categories/194-006.html
Essays! ALL of the following essays are available for same day delivery via your choice of e-mail or fax! Only $ /pg + FREE bibliography!
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Page 7 of 9 [Previous] [Next] The Burgess Shale Fauna/Dinosaur to Bird Fossil Record: Parallels and Contrasts
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An 11 page comparison of the simplicity of the animal species preserved in the Burgess Shale Deposit and the complex evolutionary path recorded in the fossil record for modern-day birds. Discusses the controversy and debate surrounding the question of the speculated origin of birds from dinosaurs. Discusses the current findings in the field and the need for additional research. Paper concludes that not only is there no current connection between the Burgess Shale deposit and the evolutionary path of our modern birds, the theories that connect modern day birds to dinosaurs will undoubtedly continue to be challenged in the future. Emphasizes that research is ongoing, however, and that the probability of identifying a clear and irrefutable association between the dinosaurs and the modern birds is more probable than improbable. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: PPdinoBd.wps

46. Genetics & Paleontology - Homework And Term Papers - 194-005
Papers On Genetics paleontology Page 6 of 7. The Phylogenetic Relationships ofAfrican hominids The Cladistic Verses the Molecular Data Approach send me
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Page 6 of 7 [Previous] [Next] The Genetic Pathway and Developmental Evolution
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A 7 page discussion of genetic pathways, specifically the direction of the orderly expression of specific gene subsets, a process which is controlled by tissue-specific transcription factors. Specific DNA target sequences are bound by these transcription factors and, in turn, interact with one another on either a cooperative basis or an antagonistic basis to control expression of the gene subsets. This interaction is aided as well by extracellular signaling molecules which both control and are controlled by the transcription factors. Ties these basic observations together with a review of research on species as diverse as Drosophila melanogaster and zebrafish. An additional 2 pages are appended on this paper which identify several references which could be applicable in an expanded review of this subject. Bibliography lists 13 sources.
Filename: PPgenePt.wps

47. Hominid Species
new biochemical evidence indicated that the last common ancestor of hominids andapes It is the intersection of the disciplines of paleontology (the study of
http://www.paleontology.arsmatrix.dk/text/species.html
Hominid Species
Introduction
The word "hominid" refers to members of the family of humans, Hominidae, which consists of all species on our side of the last common ancestor of humans and living apes. (Some scientists use a broader definition of Hominidae which includes the great apes.) Hominids are included in the superfamily of all apes, the Hominoidea, the members of which are called hominoids. Although the hominid fossil record is far from complete, and the evidence is often fragmentary, there is enough to give a good outline of the evolutionary history of humans. The time of the split between humans and living apes used to be thought to have occurred 15 to 20 million years ago, or even up to 30 or 40 million years ago. Some apes occurring within that time period, such as Ramapithecus, used to be considered as hominids, and possible ancestors of humans. Later fossil finds indicated that Ramapithecus was more closely related to the orang-utan, and new biochemical evidence indicated that the last common ancestor of hominids and apes occurred between 5 and 10 million years ago, and probably in the lower end of that range (Lewin 1987). Ramapithecus therefore is no longer considered a hominid. The field of science which studies the human fossil record is known as paleoanthropology. It is the intersection of the disciplines of paleontology (the study of ancient lifeforms) and anthropology (the study of humans).

48. Symposium On Human Paleontology, ORCE
From the 4th to 7th September it is taking place in Orce (Granada, Spain) an InternationalSymposium on Human paleontology titulated The hominids and their
http://www.ucm.es/info/Astrof/jgm/jgm_orce_i.html
INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM
ON HUMAN PALEONTOLOGY
Orce, Spain, 47 September 1995
From the 4th to 7th September it is taking place in Orce (Granada, Spain) an International Symposium on Human Paleontology titulated: "The Hominids and their cultural scene during the european lower and medium pleistocene". More than ten years ago it was found the famous portion of skull in Venta Micena, probably the most controversial of the last years. The last research works about this item, the study of the fractal geometry of both sagital and lambdoidean sutures confirming the human origin of that find, are going to be published in the prestigious Journal of Human evolution , giving end to the previous controversy. However, the consecuence has been to mask the high scientific value of the rest of the research at the Orce site becasue the finds of plio-cuaternary rests and lithic industry have been really countless. The last discoveries are ready to be presented to the scientific community that will be all together at Orce. Names as Y. Coppens, P.V. Tobias, F.C. Howell, J. Tixier, B. Chiarelli, G. Lowenstein, D. Roe, B. Wood, G. Bosinski, P. Andrews, E. Aguirre, H. de Lumley, P. Sondaar or P. villa will be present in the conference. First day, Monday

49. Science : Paleontology
Subjects Science paleontology. Mammoths, Sabertooths and hominids 65 MillionYears of Mammalian Evolution in Europe by Mauricio Anton Hardcover March
http://www.allbookstores.com/browse/SCI054000:20?arg_order_by=pubdate

50. Evolutionary Anatomy Unit : Welcome!
are also offered. Fossil hominids; paleontology; Human evolution;Amphibians/Evolution; Primates/Evolution; Reptiles/Evolution;.
http://nature.ac.uk/whatsnew/detail/8014447.html

Back
to whats new page. Evolutionary Anatomy Unit : welcome! Home page of the Evolutionary Anatomy Unit at University College London (UCL), providing information on the groups research in "vertebrate palaeontology, comparative, functional, ontogenetic and phylogenetic morphology" with an emphasis on "primate, reptilian and amphibian evolution". Resources include anatomical images, a database of early Triassic deposits and localities, and details of present members of the unit. Further sections provide information on undergraduate and postgraduate opportunities within the group and detail research themes and current projects. Links to related sites and a history of the group are also offered. Fossil hominids; Paleontology; Human evolution; Amphibians/Evolution; Primates/Evolution; Reptiles/Evolution;
Last modified 15/Mar/2003 [Low Graphics]

51. New Sauropod Analysis
paleontology is an oxymoron dinosaurs survive, are in need of constant studyand, yes, conservation and protection from hominids) paleontology as an
http://www.cmnh.org/dinoarch/2002Sep/msg00289.html
Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Author Index
New Sauropod Analysis
http://news.yahoo.com

52. Science And Technology - Earth Science (Paleontology)
Fossil Freak's Home Page The Fossil Freak supplies paleontology resources and selectedlinks. Fossil hominids Paleontologist Jim Foley refutes creationist
http://www.centerofweb.com/scitech/earth_paleontology.htm
Search the Web Perform a
Center of the Web Entire Site WebShed.Com Tech Net Nature Sunshine Basket Tree Gifts Ditto Elementary case-insensitive case-sensitive
NEW Java Search
(Paleontology)
Please email with comments and suggestions about this page. Bitten By the Bone Bug
An index of links to paleontology resources on the Web supplies detailed evaluations of each site. British Fossils
Inspect representatives of British fossil fauna and flora collected in the past 6 years. Chris Saetti's Fossil Gallery
View an online image gallery of the numerous fossil specimens occurring in the Columbus, Ohio and Caesar Creek areas. Computational Paleontology
The Computational Paleontology pages are devoted to the use of mathematical models, simulation and computer graphics in paleontology. Dinosaur Web Pages, The
The cladistic system is utilized in the presentation of technical information about dinosaurs. Dinosauria On-Line
"Jurassic Park" it ain't, but this low-tech site is content heavy filled with facts, diagrams and fossil news that would make any science teacher smile. Roam through the picture gallery or read scientific debates. Check out the DinoStore.

53. Term Papers Genetics & Paleontology -help! - 194-015
Papers On Genetics paleontology Page 16 of 19. The Phylogenetic Relationships ofAfrican hominids The Cladistic Verses the Molecular Data Approach send me
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Page 16 of 19 [Previous] [Next] The Origins of Homo Sapien
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This 5 page paper considers the arguments regarding the origins of Homo sapien, including the population replacement model, the multiregional replacement model and the genetic replacement model. These three theories are assessed, with a significant concentration placed on the validity of the population replacement model, also known as the Out of Africa model . Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: MHHomoSa.wps
The Phylogenetic Relationships of African Hominids: The Cladistic Verses the Molecular Data Approach
send me this paper

A 10 page overview of the manner in which phylogenetic relationships are determined. This paper given an outline of both the cladistic approach and the molecular data approach, emphasizing that each has their place in establishing the phylogeny of African hominids. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Filename: PPphylog.rtf

54. 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
Until recently, opportunities for women in science have been relatively few. The Geological Society of London perhaps the most important organization for geologists and paleontologists in the early 19th century didn't admit any women, not even as members' guests. Still, women have made significant contributions to the field.
"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.

55. Paleontology Contents
Comparative Anatomy. Computer Applications in paleontology. Coniferophytes. Cope,Edward Drinker. Hoaxes and Errors. hominids. Homology. Hooijer, Dirk Albert.
http://www.fitzroydearborn.com/Contents/PaleoCnt.htm
Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers Home Latest News Publications Awards ... Contact us
Encyclopedia of Paleontology
Alphabetical List of Entries Aardvarks Abel, Othenio Acanthodians Actinopterygians Adaptation Aerial Locomotion Africa: North Africa and the Middle East Africa: Sub-Saharan Africa Agassiz, Jean Louis Rudolphe Algae Allometry Ameghino, Carlos Ameghino, Florentino Amniotes Andrews, Roy Chapman Angiosperms Ankylosaurs Annelids Anning, Mary Antarctica Anthozoans Aquatic Invertebrates, Adaptive Strategies of Aquatic Locomotion Aquatic Reptiles Arambourg, Camille Louis Joseph Archosauromorphs Arthropods: Overview Arthropods. Miscellaneous Arthropods Artiodactyls Atmospheric Environment Australia: Invertebrate Paleontology Australia: Paleobotany Australia: Vertebrate Paleontology Bats Biomass and Productivity Estimates Biomechanics Bird, Roland Thaxter Birds Bivalves Boule, Marcellin Brachiopods Brain and Cranial Nerves Breuil, Henri Édouard Prosper Brongniart, Alexandre Broom, Robert Brown, Barnum Bryophytes Bryozoans Buckland, William Buffon, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de

56. ANTH 100 World Prehistory - Early Hominids
ANTH 10 General Anthropology. Early hominids and Human paleontology.Class Notes. Focus Questions. What is the general nature of the
http://www.unc.edu/courses/anth010/hominids.htm
ANTH 10
General Anthropology
Early Hominids and Human Paleontology
Class Notes
Focus Questions
  • What is the general nature of the early hominids ( Ardipithecus and Australopithecus What is the current picture of the evolutionary relationships among the hominids ( Ardipithecus Australopithecus , and Homo How can we explain the evolution of bipedality and increased brain size in hominids? Did Australopithecines make and use tools?
Defining the Hominids Distinguishing characteristics of the hominids include
  • bipedal locomotion (and structural adaptations to upright posture and bipedality) reduced anterior dentition (compared to modern African apes) thickened dental enamel (compared to modern African apes)
Hominid taxa (click here to visit the human origins web site)
  • Ardipithecus
    • Ardipithecus ramidus
      • ca. 4.4 mya position of the foramen magnum (the hole in the skull through which the spinal cord passes) suggests an upright posture dental enamel is thicker that of modern apes but thinner than that of later hominids anterior dentition (canines and incisors) is smaller than apes' but larger than later hominids context suggests that it lived in wooded environment
      Australopithecus
      • The Australopithecines are characterized by
        • bipedality reduced anterior dentition

57. Resources For History 130
Evolution and Early hominids paleontology Without Walls from the University ofCalifornia Museum of paleontology; you can view the exhibits using Phylogeny
http://www.users.csbsju.edu/~mcook/hist130.html
HISTORY 130 "The Ancient World"
Instructor: Prof. Margaret Cook
Saint John's University

Spring Semester, 1997
SYLLABUS
NEW! A source of maps Study Questions for the first exam on September 24th What you needed to say on the first exam to get an A Study Questions for the midterm on Monday November 2nd ...
POLICIES AND EXPECTATIONS
(GRADING, LATE PAPER POLICY, ETC) How to save and open your personal bookmarks
Some World Wide Web Resources for this class
Ancient World Web An Expansive Index of sites, listed geographically and by subject matter.
Ancient History Sourcebook
Lots of texts in English translation: laws, religious texts, folk tales, etc.
World History Compass collections of links concerning Ancient History in General

Lots of useful maps
. Some maps need Shockwave Plug-in, but some do not. "The Golden and the Great" Simulated Ancient travel guides to the"top one hundred" time-travel destinations. Includes Uruk, Memphis (in Egypt), Knossos, Tyre, Jerusalem, Babylon, Athens, Alexandria, Rome. Scroll down the page and click on "guides," then choose your "destination." The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Perseus
Resources for particular cultures:
Stone Age Egypt Near East Mesopotamia ... Rome
Stone Age Man:
Evolution and Early Hominids:
"Paleontology Without Walls" from the University of California Museum of Paleontology; you can view the exhibits using Phylogeny, Geology, or Evolutionary theory as the paradigm.

58. August 3, 2001, Hour One: Dinosaur Noses / Paleontology And Anthropology News
Friday Archives 2001 August August 3, 2001 Hour One paleontology and Anthropology old,give new information about the way early hominids moved and
http://www.sciencefriday.com/pages/2001/Aug/hour1_080301.html
THIS WEEK ON
SCIENCE FRIDAY... Science Friday Archives August
Hour One: Paleontology and Anthropology News
Recent reports of fossil finds in Ethiopia may change the way scientists draw the human family tree. The fossils, over 5 million years old, give new information about the way early hominids moved and the habitats that they lived in. We'll find out more. Plus, new research into the structure of dinosaurs' noses says that many depictions of the ancient creatures are all wrong. We'll talk about it. Call in with your questions and comments at 1-800-989-8255, and share your opinions online in our Listeners' Lounge registration required
Skull and fleshed-out restorations of Tyrannosaurus rex, showing the bony
Science /Painting by Bill Parsons, under the direction of L. M. Witmer. Listen to this program in RealAudio! Guests:
Lawrence Witmer
Associate Professor of Anatomy
Department of Biomedical Sciences
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine

Athens, Ohio

59. 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
Paleontology in Austrian Universities (State: 1997) Lectures in paleontology at Austrian universities have a tradition of more than 150 years; at the present time five different Austrian universities offer paleontological lectures: (1) University of Vienna, Institute for Paleontology (2) Karl Franzens-University, Graz, Institute for Geology and Paleontology (3) Leopold-Franzens-University, Innsbruck, Institute for Geology and Paleontology (4) University of Salzburg, Institute for Geology and Paleontology (5) University of Leoben, Department of Geological Sciences Only at the universities of Vienna, Graz and Innsbruck is it possible to major in paleontology. At Salzburg and Leoben, lectures in paleontology are only offered within earth science in general. University of Vienna, Institute for Paleontology The study of earth sciences at the University of Vienna is divided into different disciplines: paleontology, geology, mineralogy/crystallography, petrology, technical geology, mining geology, and - in future possibly also - geochemistry. Undergraduate studies consist of two stages, the first one (four terms) being identical for all disciplines. Paleontology is therefore a compulsory subject for all students of earth sciences. Paleontological teaching emphasizes the general principles of paleontology, and gives a basic introduction to the taxonomy of fossil faunas and floras; seminars and field trips (in different disciplines of earth science) are obligatory. For all students of earth sciences basic lectures in biology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, geology, mineralogy and petrology are compulsory.

60. Boggy's Geology Links
Organized collection of internet links to sites related to geology, including paleontology, geology Category Science Earth Sciences Geology Directories...... Early life; Exobiology; Shops. General; Dinosaurs; Birds; Fishes; Elephants;Horses; Whales; hominids; Archaeozoology. General; Microscopy; Foraminifera;
http://geologylinks.freeyellow.com/geolinks.html

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