资讯

New research shows microevolution can be used to predict how evolution works on much longer timescales by Nancy Bazilchuk, Norwegian University of Science and Technology Editors' notes ...
Human 'microevolution' sees more people born without wisdom teeth and an extra artery Australian researchers found our faces have got shorter over time and our jaws smaller.
Writing over at Panda’s Thumb, MacMillan takes on the topic of microevolution: The recent-creation model— particularly the belief that all extant life descended from a small group of “kinds ...
The American Biology Teacher, a nationally recognized journal, offers articles on recent advances in biology and life science, instructional activities for the classroom and laboratory, and ...
Australian researchers have discovered evidence of "microevolution" in humans throughout the past 250 years, indicating some small but significant changes to our physiology for the future.
Due to microevolution, it appears that P. robustus likely evolved a chewing ability that could grind tough plants, such as tubers, study co-researcher Angeline Leece, an archaeologist at La Trobe ...
A link between evolution over short time frames (microevolution) and long time frames (macroevolution) that could open new approaches to understanding some of biology's deepest questions is ...
Australian researchers have discovered evidence of "microevolution" in humans throughout the past 250 years, indicating some small but significant changes to our physiology for the future.
World Archaeology, Vol. 30, No. 2, Population and Demography (Oct., 1998), pp. 262-285 (24 pages) Linguistic evidence indicates that the Zapotecan languages spread from the Central Valleys of Oaxaca ...