Search results
All genres
Preprint (53)
2661.
Preprint
Ancient great wall building materials reveal paleoenvironmental Changes in Northwestern China. (2021)
2662.
Preprint
Molecular epidemiology of SARS-CoV-2: a regional to global perspective. (2021)
2663.
Preprint
Maltese chert: an archaeological perspective on raw material and lithic technology in the central Mediterranean. (2021)
2664.
Preprint
Cooperative phenotype predicts economic conservatism, policy views, and political party support. (2020)
2665.
Preprint
The biogeography of land ownership. (2020)
2666.
Preprint
Snowfall versus sub-shelf melt: response of an idealized 3D ice-sheet-shelf system to mass redistribution. (2018)
2667.
Preprint
The asexual genome of Drosophila. (2017)
2668.
Preprint
Paleo-Eskimo genetic legacy across North America. (2017)
2669.
Preprint
Uncertainty in future solid ice discharge from Antarctica. (2012)
Blog Post (18)
2670.
Blog Post
The legacy of two great Primatologists: goodbye to Frans de Waal and Christophe Boesch. (2024)
2671.
Blog Post
Lemurs: the mysterious primates of Madagascar ; all about lemur cognition. (2024)
2672.
Blog Post
Bonobos: the peaceful apes; here's what we can learn from our dark, hairy cousins. (2023)
2673.
Blog Post
Why horses are big dogs: there are unexpected similarities between these two species. (2023)
2674.
Blog Post
Major new research claims smaller-brained Homo naledi made rock art and buried the dead. But the evidence is lacking. (2023)
2675.
Blog Post
Hunting together in the animal kingdom: it must be worth it for both partners. (2023)
2676.
Blog Post
The chimpanzee and the moon: declarative pointing might not be uniquely human. (2022)
2677.
Blog Post
Like man, like dog: owner-dog resemblance ; is it a psychological phenomenon or a Disney fairy tale? (2022)
2678.
Blog Post
Life-sized reliefs of camels and equids: the Camel Site in Saudi Arabia. (2022)
2679.
Blog Post
The favorite animals of Comparative Psychologists: why some animals seem to get all the attention. (2022)
2680.
Blog Post
Great apes use water as a tool: the floating peanut. (2022)