mohit | Shared With: Everyone - May 02 2008 | evolution, national geographic, science
Quoted: Goals of the mission include creating a Web resource that contributes to our understanding of human origins; educating and inspiring the next generation of scientists; providing means of research for global and indigenous paleontologists, geologists, scientists, and students; creating a collaborative community and virtual meeting space for anyone interested in human origins; and presenting a prehistory of early humans.
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 11 2008 | diet, nutrition, health, evolution
The study found that genetically, all humans are pretty much the same. But, there are some differences regarding the genes that control metabolism. Might this mean that the ideal nutrition program varies from individual to individual?
Quoted: Dr Quintana-Murci found 55 genes that showed evidence of having undergone significant localised evolution.
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A further six regulated metabolism in various ways, probably in response to the different diets enjoyed by different people. (Some of these genes are of wider interest as they are involved in obesity, diabetes and hypertension.)ShareViewed: 7 Times
mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 21 2007 | science, evolution, news, hobbit
Quoted: New research on wrist bones of the Hobbit, a skeleton found four years ago that resembled a small version of early humans, suggests that it might be an ancient human ancestor, instead.
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 20 2007 | science, news, chimps, evolution
mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 17 2007 | humans, science, evolution, news, running, marathon
Quoted: Hairless, clawless, and largely weaponless, ancient humans used the unlikely combination of sweatiness and relentlessness to gain the upper hand over their faster, stronger, generally more dangerous animal prey, Harvard Anthropology Professor Daniel Lieberman said Thursday
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 22 2007 | news, chimps, ethics, morality, evolution, science
Interesting. It *appears* that dogs console others as well...but no mention in the article.
Quoted: Dr. Frans de Waal argues that human morality would be impossible without certain emotional building blocks that are clearly at work in chimp and monkey societies.
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To console another, Dr. de Waal argues, requires empathy and a level of self-awareness that only apes and humans seem to possess. And consideration of empathy quickly led him to explore the conditions for morality.ShareViewed: 14 Times
mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 24 2006 | evolution, books, toread
mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 01 2006 | news, evolution, journey of man, toread
Dotting to read later. Curious if it corroborates the 'Journey of Man' documentary.
Quoted: Whoever it was probably lived a few thousand years ago, somewhere in East Asia -- Taiwan, Malaysia and Siberia all are likely locations. He or she did nothing more remarkable than be born, live, have children and die.
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 25 2005 | evolution, darwin, spencer, news
Quoted: But goodwill and collaboration are as much part of the human condition as ill-will and competition. And that was a puzzle to 19th-century disciples of Charles Darwin, such as Herbert Spencer.
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