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- Chapter 5: the Fossil Hominid Brains of Dmanisi
- Origin of the Genus Homo Holly M
- When Did We Become Human? Evolutionary Perspectives on the Emergence of the Modern Human Mind, Brain, and Culture
- Torre the Origins of the Acheulean – Past and Present Perspectives on A
- Some Thoughts About the Evolution of Human Behavior a Literature Survey
- Dmanisi (Georgia) – Site of Discovery of the Oldest Hominid in Eurasia
- (South Africa): Archaeology and Homi
- Neanderthal-Denisovan Ancestors Interbred with a Distantly-Related Hominin
- The Palaeolithic Site of Dmanisi in Georgia and Its Role in the Earliest Prehistory of Eurasia
- The Prehistory of Compassion
- The Island Test for Cumulative Culture in the Paleolithic
- Mosaic Evolution in Hominin Phylogeny: Meanings, Implications, and Explanations
- Newsletter 10-2015
- The Archaeology of Western Asia - Graham Chandler
- Where Does Language Come From? “Exploring Our Early Origins” Juan Bornman (Phd)
- Tracing the Emergence of Palaeoart in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Earliest Human Occupations at Dmanisi (Georgian Caucasus) Dated to 1.85–1.78 Ma
- The 1.7 Million-Year-Old Site of FLK West, Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania)
- Homo Habilis
- Out of Africa an Alternative Scenario for the First Human Dispersal in Eurasia
- Earliest Human Occupations at Dmanisi (Georgian Caucasus) Dated to 1.85–1.78 Ma
- Comparative Analysis of Dentognathic Pathologies in the Dmanisi Mandibles
- Postcranial Evidence from Early Homo from Dmanisi, Georgia
- A Quantitative Assessment of Mandibular Variation in the Dmanisi Hominins
- A Landscape Approach to the Surface Archaeology of the Bos River, Tankwa Karoo, Northern Cape
- Homo Erectus/Ergaster and out of Africa
- Neanderthal-Denisovan Ancestors Interbred with a Distantly-Related Hominin
- Stranger in a New Land - Scientific American 05/02/2019 20 50
- Early Pleistocene Enamel Proteome Sequences from Dmanisi
- Early Pleistocene Enamel Proteome Sequences from Dmanisi
- Compassion from the Earliest Archaics to Modern Humans
- Locomotor Anatomy and Biomechanics of the Dmanisi Hominins
- A 1.4-Million-Year-Old Bone Handaxe from Konso, Ethiopia, Shows Advanced Tool Technology in the Early Acheulean
- Origins of Genus Homo Public Symposium ! Friday, February 5, 2016