hominid造句1 I remain, firmly in defence of happily promiscuous hominids.
2 The several branches of early hominid were not immune to the changes in climate.
3 Some biologists, along with Plato, define hominid as "featherless biped."
4 That a hominid as cerebrally limited as this one might have had control of fire gives pause.
5 As a physical anthropologist, I have studied early hominid bones and reconstructed specimens of our predecessors.
6 The early hominid, which antedate the appearence of Australopithecus robustus in the archaeological record, engaged in simple tool behavior.
7 "That milk molar was like no other hominid baby tooth I'd ever seen, and I'd seen them all, " White told me. "Gen and I just looked at each other.
8 Hominid their children, not to worry maid abuse, neglect of school discipline.
9 We think about the evolution of bipedalism as one of first events that led hominids down the path to being human.
10 Both are about modern paleontologists who encounter groups of hominids thought extinct for eons.
11 The researchers base their claim on DNA from a finger bone belonging to a hominid that lived in the Altai Mountains of central Asia between about 48,000 and 30,000 years ago.
12 The discovery of Renzidong fauna is of great help for the study of the environmental background to the hominid evolution, and the evolution of zoogeography and paleoclimate of China in the Quaternary.
13 In 1927, at Chou - k'ou - tien, near Peking, a hominid lower molar of unusual pattern was discovered.
14 The bone belongs to a cohort of the famed hominid Lucy, whose species Australopithecus afarensis roamed eastern Africa, and is the first evidence to address the question of how they got around.
15 Of the thousands of mammal fossils that workers have unearthed along with the hominid remains, many come from large carnivores such as saber-toothed cats, panthers , bears, hyenas and wolves.
16 The ETI would be to us as we would be to this early hominid — godlike.
17 DNA studies, for example, suggest that our ancient human ancestors interbred,[www.] with Neanderthals possibly being absorbed into our gene pool and disappearing as their own distinct hominid species.
18 Well-adapted to the cold climate of palaeolithic Europe and western Asia, neanderthals appear to have been the dominant hominid in the region until the emergence of anatomically modern humans.