Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
The study of early human migrations since the 1980s has developed significantly due to advances in archaeogenetics.
It was intentionally brought to tropical Pacific Islands with early human migrations.
They will help population geneticists reconstruct the size and timing of the early human migrations that peopled the globe.
See also Early human migrations The minimum widely-accepted timeframe for the arrival of humans in Australia is placed at least 40,000 years ago.
It bears the record of how humans differ from apes, the saga of early human migrations and the programming variations that help make each individual unique.
There is no clear or accepted origin of the indigenous people of Australia although they are believed to be among the earliest human migrations out of Africa.
Dr. Greenberg's work is of considerable interest to population geneticists trying to reconstruct the path of early human migrations by means of genetic patterning in different peoples.
It explains the evidence for the theory of early human migrations out of Africa and subsequently around the world, supporting the Out of Africa Theory.
Early human migrations began when Homo erectus first migrated out of Africa over the Levantine corridor and Horn of Africa to Eurasia about 1.8 million years ago.
More recently, she presented a five-part BBC Two series on human evolution and early human migrations entitled The Incredible Human Journey, beginning on 10 May 2009.
One of the potential routes for early human migrations toward southern and eastern Asia is Iran, a country characterized by a wide range of geographic variation and resources, which could support early groups of hominins who wandered into the region.
At age 80, with W. C. Sperber, he published the results of a lifelong interest in early human migrations, "The First Immigrants From Asia: A Population History of the North American Indians" (Plenum, 1992).
Coastal migration is a term sometimes used in modern anthropology and genetics for the concept that, from a single origin in Africa 100-200 thousand years before present, early human migrations first spread eastwards to areas outside Africa along routes that were predominantly located around coastlines.
The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey is a book by Spencer Wells, an American geneticist and anthropologist, in which he uses techniques and theories of genetics and evolutionary biology to trace the geographical dispersal of early human migrations out of Africa.
Pacific archeological evidence was questioned after the discovery, in that a vital piece of climatic evidence was missing - a massive and continuous rise in sea level that began 18,000 years ago and stopped 4000 years ago and possibly drowned most of the evidence of much earlier human migrations into the Pacific.