Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 1 de abr. de 2020 · The age estimate also raises further questions about the mode of evolution of H. sapiens in Africa and whether H. heidelbergensis/H. rhodesiensis was a direct ancestor of our species13,14.

  2. H. heidelbergensis se trasladó a Europa durante el período interglacial de Holstein (400—300 kya) (Wikipedia contribuidores 2015e). Figura4.19.8 4.19. 8: Caza de Homo heidelbergensis por Keenan Taylor. Al igual que las especies que les precedieron, H. heidelbergensis fueron forrajeras móviles.

  3. However, the fact that those species lived more recently in time and in developed and populated areas certainly helps, in terms of facilitating discoveries. Figure 4.19.4 4.19. 4: Homo heidelbergensis from Steinheim, Germany. “ Homo steinheimensis, holotype ” by Dr. Günter Bechly is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

  4. This specimen shows a host of both primitive and derived features that, in general, have been accepted as proof of ancestry to the Neanderthal line. The specimen was discovered in 1907 in the Mauer sand pits near Heidelberg, Germany. The exact age of the specimen is uncertain, but it dates at least as old as 400 kyr, and possibly as old as 700 ...

  5. Homo heidelbergensis. Homo heidelbergensis. Surgió hace más de 500,000 años y perduró al menos hasta hace 250,000 años en Europa y África. Eran individuos altos (1,75 m) y muy fuertes (llegarían a 100 kg), de grandes cráneos (1.350 cm³) y muy aplanados con relación a los del hombre actual, con mandíbulas salientes y gran abertura nasal.

  6. Most of the fossils that represent H. heidelbergensis are cranial, and present us with a picture of a heavy-boned form with a modestly sized dentition and a reasonably large brain of between about 1,166 and 1,325 ml. Its face is massive, surmounted by very high brow ridges that show a characteristic lateral “twist.”.

  7. 2 de abr. de 2020 · The three groups of hominins (human-like creatures) belonged to. Australopithecus. (the group made famous by the "Lucy" fossil from Ethiopia), Paranthropus. and. Homo. - better known as humans.

  1. Otras búsquedas realizadas