modern humans had about the same life expectancy as their hairier, ancient cousins.
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shared by Lauren Ganze on 14 Dec 11
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Dying Young Didn't Wipe Out Neanderthals : Discovery News - 1 views
news.discovery.com/...nderthal-life-span-110111.html
Neanderthal anthropology evolution Human extinct

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higher fertility rates and lower infant mortality gave modern humans an advantage over the Neanderthals,
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shared by Lauren Ganze on 14 Dec 11
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Neanderthals, Humans Interbred-First Solid DNA Evidence - 1 views
news.nationalgeographic.com/...umans-mated-interbred-dna-gene
Neanderthal Human relations DNA shared anthropology evolution

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The results showed that Neanderthal DNA is 99.7 percent identical to modern human DNA, versus, for example, 98.8 percent for modern humans and chimps, according to the study.
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Neanderthals, the study team says, probably mixed with early Homo sapiens just after they'd left Africa but before Homo sapiens split into different ethnic groups and scattered around the globe.
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Ape Genius reveals depth of animal intelligence - Telegraph - 1 views
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Chimpanzees in Senegal make and sharpen spears with their teeth to go hunting. Like our own ancestors they have learned to use tools to kill their quarry more effectively.
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Ape Genius - which gives a fascinating insight into the depth of intelligence of animals who share 99 per cent of human genes
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.at15t_email {display:none !important;} ul li.email span.at300bs {display:none !important;} X Share & bookmark Delicious Facebook Google Messenger Reddit Twitter Digg Fark LinkedIn Google Buzz StumbleUpon http://www.addthis.com/bookmark.php?v=250&winname=addthis&pub=telegraphmedia&source=tbx-250&lng=en-US&s=buzz&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.telegraph.co.uk%2Fearth%2Fearthnews%2F3341339%2FApe-Genius-reveals-depth-of-animal-intelligence.html&title=Ape%2
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Although they can be taught to recognise symbols and words they don't have the mental capacity to contribute to a 'conversation' - and they don't make small talk
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And most important of all although they can imitate, they can't teach or build on the achievements others have made - unlike more successful humans.
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n, learn skills, feel emotion and co-operate in a frenzied tree-top hunt for Colobus monkeys as chimpanzees do, why don't we have a planet of the apes?
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Evolution and the Fossil Record by John Pojeta, Jr. and Dale A. Springer - 1 views
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The organisms whose variations best fit them to the environment are the ones who are most likely to survive, reproduce, and pass those desirable variations on to the next generation.
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advantageous genetic variations are passed along and become represented with increasing frequency in succeeding generations.
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PBS - Scientific American Frontiers:Chimps R Us:Frontiers Profile:Jane Goodall - 1 views
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adopted by a 12-year-old, non-related adolescent male
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When you watch a young male growing up, all his relationships begin to change. He begins to dominate the females
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it's completely amazing how even a fully adult male is usually very respectful of his ancient mother.
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And she hears this and she comes charging over, rushes up the tree, and hauls herself on this melee of three enormous males. I think the two others were so amazed that they stopped attacking Satan
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Chimps R Us- Frontiers Profile: Jane Goodall - 1 views
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It's much better to cling to the old ideas that animals are just little machines and they have stimulus and response
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So Like Us | About Chimpanzees | Chimpanzees | the Jane Goodall Institute of Canada - 2 views
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Chimpanzees and humans differ by just over one percent of DNA. In fact biologically, chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than t
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and humans differ by just over one percent of DNA. In fact biologically, chimpanzees are more closely related to humans tha
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Chimpanzees become sexually mature between the ages of 10 and 13
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both have an insatiable appetite for play, are extremely curious, learn through observation and imitation,
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Females show their first very small sexual swellings at age eight or nine, but are not sexually attractive to the older males until they reach age 10 or 11.
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This learning is the means by which certain actions are passed from one generation to the next—the beginnings of culture.
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Four-Winged Dinosaurs Found in China, Experts Announce - 0 views
news.nationalgeographic.com/...0121_030122_dromaeosaur.html
nova dinosaurs experts dinosaur anthropology

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bipedal carnivorous dinosaurs called theropods
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The six specimens were excavated from the rich fossil beds of Liaoning Province in northeastern China
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How did a group of ground-dwelling flightless dinosaurs evolve to a feathered animal capable of flying?
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dromaeosaurs were small, feathered animals with forelimbs similar to those of Archaeopteryx, the oldest known bird at around 150 million years old, and feet with features comparable to modern tree-living birds.
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Edge: ARE HUMAN BRAINS UNIQUE? By Michael Gazzaniga - 2 views
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a simple sentiment yet so full of human complexity. Other apes don't have that sentiment.
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We want to see our dogs charm us, appeal to our emotions, imagine they too can suffer and have pity, love and hate and all the rest
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Thousands of scientists and philosophers over hundreds of years have either recognized this uniqueness of ours or have denied it
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Even though we have all of these connections with the biologic world from which we came, and we have in some instances similar mental structures, we are hugely different.
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The Learning Generalist: March 2011 - 0 views
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The knowledge is all around people and a lot of advanced technology is so ubiquitous that it makes connection, organising, sharing and learning easier than ever before
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Think about how we watch TV. We watch TV for the content, but the content drives relationships. We watch TV while at dinner, we congregate in groups to watch sport. These are the conversations that create our culture
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Now this kind of stuff should be showing it's effect on education, but it doesnt - 43% of students are bored, up from 20% in the 80s
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Let's analyse it over time. In the pre-60s "Whatever" meant "That's what I meant". After the 60s it became synonymous with "I don't care" or a "Meh...".
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it's a way for people to raise their personality and not be indistinguishable. More people want to be important today - more people want to be the new American Ido
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From the late 90s to now, people have adopted the "I'll do what I want" meaning for "Whatever". It's an empowered generation and free culture
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We all need identity and recognition and the media keeps bombarding us with messages of the kind of people we should become. The search for the authentic self leads us towards self-centered modes of self-fulfillment and disagreement on several things - values, views, approaches. We're more disengaged and more fragmented. The new media revolution is creating the cultural background for this kind of a change.
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Human Family Tree | The Smithsonian Institution's Human Origins Program - 0 views
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NOVA | The Nurture of Nature - 0 views
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Harvard naturalist E. O. Wilson published his seminal Sociobiology in 1975. The book unleashed a heated debate over whether social behaviors such as altruism or aggression could have a genetic basis, a controversy that helped spur the now vigorous research into such mysteries.
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BBC News - Did the discovery of cooking make us human? - 0 views
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"Our ancestors most probably dropped food in fire accidently. They would have found it was delicious and that set us off on a whole new direction."
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Erectus also had a similar body shape to us. Shorter arms and longer legs appeared, and gone was the large vegetable-processing gut, meaning that Erectus could not only walk upright, but could also run.
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Cooking is essentially a form of pre-digestion, which has transferred energy use from our guts to our brains.
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Cooking Gave Humans Edge Over Apes? - 0 views
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Are women more empathic than men? | Greater Good - 0 views
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By Emiliana R. Simon-Thomas
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Animal cognition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views
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artificial language comprehension in the bottlenosed dolphin using cognitive research methods
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mostly concerns mammals, especially primates, cetaceans, and elephants, as well as dogs, cats, and rodents.
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other animals do have minds and that humans should approach the study of their cognition accordingly.
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The ability to properly navigate and search through the environment is a critical task for many animals.
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Research in 2007 shows that chimpanzees in the Fongoli savannah sharpen sticks to use as spears when hunting, considered the first evidence of systematic use of weapons in a species other than humans.
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The sense in which animals can be said to have consciousness or a self-concept has been hotly debated; it is often referred to as the debate over animal minds.
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It has been suggested that metacognition in some animals provides some evidence for cognitive self-awareness.[11] The great apes, dolphins, and rhesus monkeys have demonstrated the ability to monitor their own mental states and use an "I don't know" response to avoid answering difficult questions. These species might also be aware of the strength of their memories.
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Indeed it is an interesting topic. Please don't bookmark wikipedia articles but maybe check out one of their references on the topic. You could also use some of the names of the anthropologists working in this field that we learned about. Susan Savage Rumbage was one who was featured in the documentary 'Ape Genius' and who worked with Kanzi.
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shared by Chrissy Le on 08 Dec 11
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Animal Minds - National Geographic Magazine - 0 views
ngm.nationalgeographic.com/...virginia-morell-text
intelligence communication animals brain language evolution science consciousness

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She brought a one-year-old African gray parrot she named Alex into her lab to teach him to reproduce the sounds of the English language.
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They were simply machines, robots programmed to react to stimuli but lacking the ability to think or feel. Any pet owner would disagree.
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How, then, does a scientist prove that an animal is capable of thinking—that it is able to acquire information about the world and act on it?
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Certain skills are considered key signs of higher mental abilities: good memory, a grasp of grammar and symbols, self-awareness, understanding others' motives, imitating others, and being creative.
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chimpanzees use a variety of tools to probe termite mounds and even use weapons to hunt small mammals; dolphins can imitate human postures; the archerfish, which stuns insects with a sudden blast of water, can learn how to aim its squirt simply by watching an experienced fish perform the task.
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Chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas have been taught to use sign language and symbols to communicate with us, often with impressive results.