Language
English
German
^M
Dutch
Spanish
Title:
Frog perspective on the morphological difference between humans and chimpanzees
Source:
Science [0036-8075] Cherty, L M yr:1978
Basic
Sorry, no full text available...
Please use the document delivery service (see below)
Holding information
Holdings in library search engine
ALBERT
Document delivery
Request document via
Library/Bibliothek
Users interested in this article also expressed an interest in the following:
description
1.
Bigoni, F.
"Mapping homology between human and black and white colobine monkey chromosomes by fluorescent in situ hybridization."
American journal of primatology
42.4 (1997): 289-298.
description
2.
Povinelli, Daniel J.
"Inferring other minds: Failure of the argument by analogy."
Philosophical topics
27.1 (2000): 167-201.
description
3.
Bastir, M.
"Facial heights: evolutionary relevance of postnatal ontogeny for facial orientation and skull morphology in humans and chimpanzes."
Journal of human evolution
47.5 (2004): 359-81.
description
4.
Stanyon, R.
"Primate chromosome evolution: Ancestral karyotypes, marker order and neocentromeres."
Chromosome research
16.1 (2008): 17-39.
description
5.
Yim, Jae-Joon, J.
"Evolution of an intronic microsatellite polymorphism in Toll-like receptor 2 among primates."
Immunogenetics
58.9 (2006): 740-745.
description
6.
Bastir, M.
"Hierarchical nature of morphological integration and modularity in thehuman posterior face."
American journal of physical anthropology
128.1 (2005): 26-34.
description
7.
"Legitimating Torture%3F."
Criminal law and philosophy.
11.2: 331-.
description
8.
Patterson, N.
"Complex speciation of humans and chimpanzees - Reply."
Nature
452.7184 (2008).
description
9.
Coleman, D.
"HUME, MIRACLES AND LOTTERIES."
Hume studies
14.2 (1988): 328-346.
description
10.
Povinelli, Daniel J.
"Chimpanzee minds: suspiciously human?"
Trends in cognitive sciences
7.4 (2003): 157-160.
description
11.
Tomasello, M.
"Chimpanzees understand psychological states–the question is which ones and to what extent."
Trends in cognitive sciences
7.4 (2003): 153-156.
description
12.
Call, J..
"Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind? 30 years later."
Trends in cognitive sciences
12.5 (2008): 187-192.
description
13.
Povinelli, Daniel J.
"We Don't Need a Microscope to Explore the Chimpanzee's Mind."
Mind & language
19.1 (2004): 1-28.
description
14.
Ferguson-Smith, M.
"Mammalian karyotype evolution."
Nature reviews. Genetics
8.12 (2007): 950-962.
description
15.
De Grouchy, J.
"Chromosome phylogenies of man, great apes, and Old World monkeys."
Genetica
73.1-2 (1987): 37-52.
description
16.
Rosas, A.
"Thin-plate spinal analysis of allometry and sexual dimorphism in the human craniofacial complex."
American journal of physical anthropology
117.3 (2002): 236-245.
description
17.
Flombaum, Jonathan I I.
"Rhesus monkeys attribute perceptions to others."
Current biology
15.5 (2005): 447-52.
description
18.
Flew, A.
"Fogelin on Hume on Miracles."
Hume studies
16.2 (1990): 141-144.
description
19.
Warneken, F.
"Altruistic Helping in Human Infants and Young Chimpanzees."
Science
311.5765 (2006): 1301-1303.
description
20.
Raveendran, M.
"Designing new microsatellite markers for linkage and population genetic analyses in rhesus macaques and other nonhuman primates."
Genomics
88.6 (2006): 706-710.
View More...
View Less...
Select All
Clear All
Save Citations
Select Format
RefWorks
EndNote
Reference Manager
ProCite
Submit citation export
Advanced
Author
Other articles by this author? -- in
GeoRef
author:
Cherty, L M
Case, S M
Wilson, A C
last name
initials
Other articles by this author? -- in
Online Contents Geosciences
author:
Cherty, L M
Case, S M
Wilson, A C
last name
initials
Web Search
Find related information in
a Web Search Engine
Excite
Google
HotBot
Ixquick
ZOO
Ask
Yahoo!
Bing
Naver
Search Terms:
Search for related information in
Google Scholar
Article Title
Author Name
Journal Title
Other Search
Search Terms:
A service provided by the
Library of the Wissenschaftspark Albert Einstein
, Potsdam, Germany.
© 2005 SFX by Ex Libris Inc.