Vertebrates
  Home FAQ Contact Sign in
 
Advanced search
MATCHING GROUPS



more...
POPULAR GROUPS

more...

found 264 articles for 0.001 sec
Martian Alice has three articulated vertebrates.     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Lin Liangtai
Date: Sep 20, 2008 02:24

Martian Alice has three articulated vertebrates. Fig. 1 below shows three articulated vertebrates below the skull and a vessel protruding from the eye socket of Alice on Mars. Fig. 1: http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=20&f=1555343376&p=101 Fig. 2: Another view of Alice showing more vessels ...
Show full article (0.48Kb)
Paper: The medaka draft genome and insights into vertebrate genome evolution     

Group: sci.bio.evolution · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in sci.bio.evolution
Author: Robert Karl Stonjek
Date: Jun 7, 2007 11:23

... The medaka draft genome and insights into vertebrate genome evolution Masahiro Kasahara, Kiyoshi Naruse, Shin...Teleosts comprise more than half of all vertebrate species and have adapted to a variety...are important subjects for the understanding of vertebrate evolution. Although draft genome sequences of two...the highest SNP rate seen in any vertebrate species. Analyses based on the dense SNP...
Show full article (2.55Kb)
ORIGIN OF BIRDS AND MAMMALS     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Hamady
Date: Sep 20, 2008 05:25

... paleontologist and an authority on vertebrate paleontology, Robert L. Carroll has to... at the Chinese Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology, discovered a new bird ... that it is "unique among vertebrates".2 There is no fossil .... 56 44 Robert L. Carroll, Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, New York:... Carroll, Patterns and Processes of Vertebrate Evolution, Cambridge University Press, 1997,...
Show full article (17.62Kb)
Re: THE TALE OF TRANSITION FROM WATER TO LAND     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Immortalist
Date: Sep 17, 2008 21:09

... have enormous structural differences. Invertebrates have their hard tissues outside their bodies, whereas fish are vertebrates that have theirs on the inside. Such an enormous "evolution" would have taken ... to evolve were the Agnathans (Class agnatha) (7). These jawless fishes are the first vertebrates. These fish have round mouth parts that could be used for sucking or filter feeding (...
Show full article (4.67Kb) · Show article thread
THE TALE OF TRANSITION FROM WATER TO LAND     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Hamady
Date: Sep 17, 2008 20:30

..., an evolutionary palaeontologist and authority on vertebrate palaeontology, is obliged to accept this. He has written in his classic work, Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, that "The early reptiles...his newer book, Patterns and Processes of Vertebrate Evolution, puslished in 1997, he admits ... L. Carroll, Patterns and Processes of Vertebrate Evolution, Cambridge University Press, 1997, p....
Show full article (9.04Kb)
Re: On My Buddies     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Immortalist
Date: Aug 25, 2008 22:33

... two of these letters may be enough to make all the difference. The effect is to delay the expression of the Hoxc8 gene slightly in the development of the chicken embryo. Since ; development of the vertebral column starts at the head, this means the chicken goes on making neck vertebrae longer than the mouse. In the python, Hoxc8 is expressed right from the head and goes on being expressed ...
Show full article (27.69Kb) · Show article thread
Re: I am you, you are I     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Immortalist
Date: Aug 16, 2008 23:30

... networks rather than layers of inherited intelligence building over themselves. Only problem with that is that reptiles have similar parts to their brain stems but nothing else, some vertebrates and mammals don't have any outer cortex but have the reptilian brain stem and the limbic mid brain structures. In order for you position to be sustained you would need...
Show full article (9.68Kb) · Show article thread
Re: I am you, you are I     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: turtoni
Date: Aug 15, 2008 23:12

... networks rather than layers of inherited intelligence building over themselves. Only problem with that is that reptiles have similar parts to their brain stems but nothing else, some vertebrates and mammals don't have any outer cortex but have the reptilian brain stem and the limbic mid brain structures. In order for you position to be sustained you would need to ...
Show full article (7.80Kb) · Show article thread
Re: I am you, you are I     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Immortalist
Date: Aug 15, 2008 22:46

... of interwoven networks rather than layers of inherited intelligence building over themselves. Only problem with that is that reptiles have similar parts to their brain stems but nothing else, some vertebrates and mammals don't have any outer cortex but have the reptilian brain stem and the limbic mid brain structures. In order for you position to be sustained you would need to ...
Show full article (7.08Kb) · Show article thread
Re: Life lifetime (nano seceonds to million years)     

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile · Search for Vertebrates in alt.philosophy
Author: Painius
Date: Aug 13, 2008 11:26

... for average 100 years. . . . Geoffrey West has done some interesting work on biological scaling invariants. For example, the total number of heartbeats over the course of a vertebrate's life is remarkably constant, independent of species. Except for the human species, correct? I read a similar study back in the 70's that produced the result that humans would only live about ...
Show full article (1.38Kb) · Show article thread
1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · next