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Ileret
Lake Turkana and the Lower Omo the Arid and Semi-Arid Lands Account for 50% of Kenya’S Livestock Production (Snyder, 2006)
Lake Turkana Archaeology: the Holocene
1646 KMS Kenya Past and Present Issue 46.Pdf
Early Hominin Foot Morphology Based on 1.5-Million-Year-Old
Areas 1- Ern Africa
Interim Independent Boundaries Review Commission (IIBRC)
01-96-Atlas Histoafrique-Maq4 BAT3.Indd
A Pastoral Neolithic Mortuary Site East of Lake Turkana, Kenya ^
The Annual Flood of the Omo River
Hominin Stature, Body Mass, and Walking Speed Estimates Based on 1.5 Million-Year-Old Fossil Footprints at Ileret, Kenya
Paper Series N° 33
National Museums of Kenya 2008/2009 Annual Report
10501.Full.Pdf
IEBC Report on Constituency and Ward Boundaries
Journal of Human Evolution 112 (2017) 93E104
From 1.5 to 0.85 Ma at Melka Kunture (Upper Awash, Ethiopian Highlands)
Block 10BA Seismic EIA Project Report
A 1.4-Million-Year-Old Bone Handaxe from Konso, Ethiopia, Shows Advanced Tool Technology in the Early Acheulean
Top View
Four Middle Holocene Pillar Sites in West Turkana, Kenya. J Field
Finding Their Place in the Swahili World: an Archaeological Exploration of Southern Tanzania
NEIL THOMAS ROACH Department of Human Evolutionary Biology Harvard University
Evidence for Early Trade Between the Coast and Interior of East Africa
Spatial and Temporal Evolution of the Volcanics and Sediments of the Kenya Rift
East African Association for Paleoanthropology and Paleontology
© in This Web Service Cambridge University
1836 KMS Kenya Past and Present Issue 36
1838 KMS Kenya Past and Present Issue 38
Knowledge Transmission Through the Lens of Lithic Production: a Case Study from the Pastoral Neolithic of Southern Kenya
©2011 Emmanuel Kimuma Ndiema ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
The Technological and Socio-Economic Organization of the Elmenteitan Early Herders in Southern Kenya (3000-1200 BP)
Archaeological Perspectives on Risk and Community Resilience in the Baringo Lowlands, Kenya
Drivers and Trajectories of Land Cover Change in East Africa
Sexual Dimorphism in Homo Erectus Inferred from 1.5 Ma Footprints Near Ileret, Kenya
A 1.4-Million-Year-Old Bone Handaxe from Konso, Ethiopia, Shows Advanced Tool Technology in the Early Acheulean
1835 KMS Kenya Past and Present Issue 35
A Large Homo Erectus Talus from Koobi Fora, Kenya (KNM-ER 5428), and Pleistocene Hominin Talar Evolution