
Bethan Linscott
Articles
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May 11, 2023 |
tolerance.ca | Bethan Linscott
The region of Estremadura in Portugal was home to a band of Neanderthals – an ancient evolutionary relative of modern humans – about 95,000 years ago. They made use of the patchwork of limestone caves, crags and river valleys, leaving traces of their activities in the form of stone tools, butchered animal bones and the remnants of fireplaces. Now their teeth are providing new insights on how they hunted and interacted with their landscape.
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May 11, 2023 |
theconversation.com | Bethan Linscott
The region of Estremadura in Portugal was home to a band of Neanderthals – an ancient evolutionary relative of modern humans – about 95,000 years ago. They made use of the patchwork of limestone caves, crags and river valleys, leaving traces of their activities in the form of stone tools, butchered animal bones and the remnants of fireplaces. Now their teeth are providing new insights on how they hunted and interacted with their landscape.
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May 11, 2023 |
ca.sports.yahoo.com | Bethan Linscott
The region of Estremadura in Portugal was home to a band of Neanderthals – an ancient evolutionary relative of modern humans – about 95,000 years ago. They made use of the patchwork of limestone caves, crags and river valleys, leaving traces of their activities in the form of stone tools, butchered animal bones and the remnants of fireplaces. Now their teeth are providing new insights on how they hunted and interacted with their landscape.
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May 11, 2023 |
ca.sports.yahoo.com | Bethan Linscott
The region of Estremadura in Portugal was home to a band of Neanderthals – an ancient evolutionary relative of modern humans – about 95,000 years ago. They made use of the patchwork of limestone caves, crags and river valleys, leaving traces of their activities in the form of stone tools, butchered animal bones and the remnants of fireplaces. Now their teeth are providing new insights on how they hunted and interacted with their landscape.
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May 9, 2023 |
pnas.org | Andrea Rinaldo |Bethan Linscott |Diego E. Angelucci |Matthew Cooper
Skip to main content Spatially explicit effective reproduction numbers from incidence and mobility data Contributed by Andrea Rinaldo; received November 20, 2022; accepted March 28, 2023; reviewed by Stefano Merler and Alessandro Vespignani Significance The effective reproduction number quantifies the average number of secondary infections caused by an infected individual (within the population of their own resident community, or anywhere else) when the pool of susceptibles, the...
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