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Showing results for the phrase "World" in World Region.
- Description
- Australopithecines, chronological chart. (Original teaching slide code: PM-17)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20556
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- A. africanus, reconstruction done by Gurche. (Original teaching slide code: PM-18)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20557
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Chimp vs Australopithecus. Skull and Pelvis, chimp on left, A. afarensis on right (Original teaching slide code: PM-2)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20541
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Lithic technology, hard hammer percussion. (Original teaching slide code: PM-21)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20560
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Lithic technology, soft Hammer percussion. (Original teaching slide code: PM-22)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20561
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Acheulean technology, Acheulean technology. (Original teaching slide code: PM-23)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20562
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Cleaver. (Original teaching slide code: PM-24)
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20563
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Map Early of Sites with Homo erectus and archaic Homo sapiens. (Original teaching slide code: PM-25)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20564
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Homo erectus, reconstruction done by Burian. (Original teaching slide code: PM-29)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20568
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Dart holding Taung child. Taung: A. africanus, age ca. 2.7 Ma, discovered 1924, (Original teaching slide code: PM-3)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20542
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Mousterian point (left), Levallois core and point (right) (Original teaching slide code: PM-32)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20571
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Life history of a side scraper, see any article by Dibble. (Original teaching slide code: PM-33)
- Date of Photo
- 1994
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20572
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Different portrayals, Ape-man based on La Chapelle (ca. 1910), in suit by Coon (ca. 1950s). (Original teaching slide code: PM-34)
- Date of Photo
- 1995
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20573
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Neanderthals, reconstruction by Gurche. (Original teaching slide code: PM-35)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20574
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Raw material sources, Middle vs. Upper Paleolithic. The big difference in the distances over which raw materials were obtained comes with the Uper Palaeolithic when shells, amber, and other items were widely traded. (Original teaching slide code: PM-37)
- Date of Photo
- 1994
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20576
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Early Modern Humans: Predmosti 3 (top), ca. 25 Ka and Qafzeh 9 (bottom), ca. 95 Ka. (Original teaching slide code: PM-40)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20579
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Chimp vs. gracile and robust Australopithecines. Biomechanics of feeding. (Original teaching slide code: PM-5)
- Date of Photo
- 1995
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20544
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Chimp vs. human locomotion. Biomechanics of walking. (Original teaching slide code: PM-6)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20545
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- A. afarensis composite skeleton. Lovejoy reconstruction. (Original teaching slide code: PM-7)
- Date of Photo
- 1988
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20546
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Chimp, A. afarensis (AL 200), Human dental arches, AL 200, age ca. 3.4 Ma, from Awash, Ethiopia. (Original teaching slide code: PM-8)
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 20547
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Correct and incorrect excavation.
- Date of Photo
- 1961
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11285
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Radiocarbon age versus true age for 1000 years. Dated 1966.
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11286
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Carbon 14 and tree ring ages.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11287
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Cone of percussion.
- Date of Photo
- 1953
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11288
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Cone of percussion: (a-d) Theoretical stages in the fracture. (e) A flake removed with incomplete conical fracture. (f) An actual cone preserved intact. (i.e. corresponding to d).
- Date of Photo
- 1956
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11289
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Fig. 2 The ideal flake, in which all the conchoidal features are clearly visible.
- Date of Photo
- 1956
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11290
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Lithic technology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11291
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Lithic technology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11292
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Lithic technology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11293
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Flake and blade typology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11294
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Biface typology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11295
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Burin typology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11296
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Microlith, backed and barbed typology.
- Date of Photo
- 1966
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11297
- World Region
- World
- Description
- Plesidapis, 60-55 million years ago. Paleocene.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11298
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Smilodectes, 50-45 million years ago, Eocene.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11299
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Pliopithecus, 23-12 million years ago, Miocene.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11300
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Pliopithecus: One of the earliest proto-apes, Pliopithecus had the look of a modern gibbon although its arms were not as disproportionately long and specialized for swinging through the trees. On the basis of its teeth and skull it is now classed as an ancestor of the gibbon line.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11301
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Oreopithecus, 14 -8 million years ago, Pliocene.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11302
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Oreopithecus: A likely sidebranch on man's family tree, Oreopithecus is believed t ohave stood around four feet tall and weighed about 80 pounds. Its teeth and pelvis led scientists to wonder if it could be ancestral to man, but apparently it became extinct some 8 million years ago.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11303
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Oreopithecus, a human collateral of the Pliocene epoch.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11304
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Dryopithecus: Though its skeleton is tantalizingly incomplete, Dryopithecus can be fairly described from a few jaws and teeth. First of the fossil great apes to be discovered, it was widely distributed; remains have been unearthed throughout Europe, in North India and China.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11305
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Proconsul, Miocene.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11306
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Proconsul: Known from numerous fragments adding up to almost complete skeletons, Proconsul is considered to be a very early ape, the ancestor of the chimpanzee and perhaps of the gorilla. A contemporary of Pliopithecus, it is often found with it in the same fossil site.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11307
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Proconsul (by Wilson).
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11308
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Ramapithecus: The easliest manlike primate found so far, Ramapithecus is now thought by some experts to be the oldest of man's ancestors in a direct line. This hominid status is predicated upon a few teeth, some fragments of jaw and a palate unmistakably human in shape.
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11309
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Craniograms of Australopithecus africanus, infant (dashed and dotted line); Australpithecus prometheus, female (solid line); and Paranthropus robustus, male (dotted line).
- Date of Photo
- 1951
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11314
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Craniograms of Australopithecus prometheus (solid line); Plesianthropus transvaalensis, male (dashed and dotted line); and Paranthropus robustus, male (dotted line).
- Date of Photo
- 1951
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11315
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- First milk molars of Australopithecus, Paranthropus, and Bushman.
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11316
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Left lateral views of innominate bones in chimpanzee (left), Australopithecus prometheus (center), and Bushman (right).
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11317
- World Region
- Old World
- Description
- Australopithecus and Paranthropus. Australopithecus: Ramapithecus and this early form of Australopithecus, the first certain hominid, are seperated by a gap of nine million years. In this time, the prehumans made great advances - they walked upright, lived on the ground and may have used stones in their defense; Paranthropus: though he stood erect and had hominid features, Paranthropus represents an evolutionary dead end in man's ancestry. A vegeta
- Date of Photo
- 1965
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 11323
- World Region
- Old World