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  1. Hace 5 días · Si bien las primeras especies de homínidos, como Paranthropus, probablemente evolucionaron fisiológicamente para expandir su nicho (adaptando dientes para explotar nuevos tipos de alimentos, por...

  2. Hace 1 día · Paranthropus was a genus of particularly robust hominids that emerged during the Pliocene epoch around 2.9 – 2.6 million years ago. These guys were no flash in the pan, lasting for another 1.5 million years until the Pleistocene, roughly 1.2 million years ago. These ancient creatures, often referred to as “robust australopithecines ...

  3. Hace 2 días · Si bien las primeras especies de homínidos, como Paranthropus, probablemente evolucionaron fisiológicamente para expandir su nicho (adaptando los dientes para explotar nuevos tipos de alimentos, por ejemplo), el impulsor del patrón evolutivo, muy diferente en nuestro propio género Homo, bien pudo haber sido la tecnología.

  4. Hace 2 días · A new study from the University of Cambridge suggests that interspecies competition significantly influenced the evolutionary trajectory of hominins, resulting in a “bizarre” evolutionary pattern for the Homo lineage. This research also proposes revised timelines for the emergence and extinction of various early human ancestors.

  5. Hace 4 días · However, a new study from the University of Cambridge has unveiled a strikingly unconventional pattern in human evolution. Researchers found that the rate of emergence of new species in our ...

  6. Hace 3 días · Authors have found evidence for a Paranthropus clade, with Australopithecus being paraphyletic and specimens attributed to A. afarensis being reclassified as P. africanus, which is believed to be the sister of later hominids. In addition, Paranthropus was positioned as the sister of Homo and A. africanus as the sister of the Homo + Paranthropus ...

  7. Hace 5 días · While early species of hominins, such as Paranthropus, probably evolved physiologically to expand their niche—adapting teeth to exploit new types of food, for example—the driver of the very different pattern in our own genus Homo may well have been technology.

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