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To address this, in 1985, English palaeoanthropologist
Bernard Wood proposed that the comparatively massive skull KNM-ER 1470 from Lake Turkana, Kenya, discovered in 1972 and assigned to H. habilis, actually represented a different species, now referred to as Homo rudolfensis, but it is also argued
469:
After description, it was hotly debated if H. habilis should be reclassified into
Australopithecus africanus (the only other early hominin known at the time), in part because the remains were so old and at the time Homo was presumed to have evolved in Asia (with the australopithecines having no
441:
Were the
Leakeys a husband/wife team? You only mention Jonathan but then go on to say "discovered by the Leakeys' senior assistant Heselon Mukiri in 1959" which indicates more than one Leakey. I now see this is addressed in the next sentence, but the order is confusing. You could say, "...were
328:
culture encompasses social behaviors and norms of a society. In anthropology, a creature which produces tools is considered to have material culture (the
Oldowan is a culture), and so the term culture has to be used here. Consequently, group dynamics as well as other behaviors are listed under
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However, the foot has projected toe bone and compacted mid-foot joint structures, which restricts rotation in the hind and front parts of the foot and is implicated in the plantar arch elastic spring mechanism which generates energy while running (but not
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Just because you have never ever seen it doesn't mean it isn't a convention for some It's part of several style guides to not begin sentences with abbreviations. That specific convention is listed in several
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No, anatomically early hominins possess some traits that align with humans and some traits that align with various other apes (it's also the reason why there's basically no resolution)
1015:
I think it's considered more "proper" to begin sentences with the full genus name rather than an abbreviation. This is not a sticking point for GA, but something to consider.
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1064:"There are a few exceptions to some of these rules. First, the entire genus name must be spelled out if it begins a sentence, even if a subsequent reference";
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I read "features" as a noun here and not a verb, which would make sense but for the "traits" at the end. Maybe just "has" so that confusion is avoided
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I think should be either australopithecine brain size, using as an adjective, or australopithecines' brain size, using as plural possessive.
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could you make the connection here a bit more clear to the reader--how handedness could result in a certain striation pattern
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there isn't one, it's just an example of a potential tree. There is absolutely 0 resolution when it comes to early hominins
402:
Okay, then the meaning is still unclear. Why not "partial skull, hand bones, and foot bones"? Why is "and" necessary twice?
1046:"References to a genus that has already been mentioned may be abbreviated unless they occur at the beginning of a sentence"
470:
living descendants), and the brain size was smaller than what
Wilfrid Le Gros Clark proposed in 1955 when considering Homo
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unclear which ones are partial. It could be, "A partial skull, as well as hand and foot bones" if that is what you mean.
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discovered by
Heselon Mukiri in 1959, who was a senior assistant of Louis and Mary Leakey (Jonathan's parents)."
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the customs, arts, social institutions, and achievements of a particular nation, people, or other social group.
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personally I like seeing numbers than written out because my brain can more easily identify 5 than five
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What's the methodology of the cladogram? Morphology? You could tack on a bit at the end, "based on x".
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correlate between polygyny with a high degree and monogamy with a low degree based on general trends
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The pattern of striations on the teeth of OH 65 slanting right could indicate right handedness,
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that instead it represents a male specimen whereas other H. habilis specimens are female.
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the arts and other manifestations of human intellectual achievement regarded collectively
1052:"However, it is better to spell out the genus in full at the beginning of a sentence."
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can this be rephrased? Or perhaps split apart? I'm not really following the meaning
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Is there a word other than "culture" you could use here? What about "behavior"?
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I would link and gloss at first usage. I have never seen that word before.
789:"speculate with accuracy" is a bit oxymoronic, perhaps "correctly identify"
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I meant verb tense. Do you think it should be "possess" or "possessed"?
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I wouldn't consider "diet" as a subsection of culture. In the article
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I would use "large" there, but I don't know that high is wrong.
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The left foot OH 8 seems to have been bitten off by a crocodile
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Not gonna lie, I actually forgot this review was already open
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as more fossil elements and species were being unearthed
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What are your sources for the
African hominin timeline?
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the left foot "of" OH 8? Or is OH 8 the severed foot?
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only known from 2 highly fragmentary skeletons, and
1120:I'll come back to this tomorrow, sorry for delay.
787:it is highly difficult to speculate with accuracy
329:Culture. This convention is also used in the GAs
170:H. habilis was proposed as being a human ancestor
536:You use both Ma and mya. I would stick with one.
376:a partial juvenile skull and hand and foot bones
250:subject/verb disagreement; "is" should be "are"
416:"partial skull bones" sounded incorrect. Done
1058:pg 6, Beginning of sentence: spell out genus;
8:
1022:I have never seen that convention used ever
985:Checked for copyvio. Only hits were mirrors.
472:quite a long sentence. Can it be broken up?
248:based largely on assuming a similar anatomy
287:Human is hardly a C-class article, and in
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1092:numbers less than 10 usually written out
728:partially arboreal lifestyle in the trees
589:features less ancestral, or basal, traits
385:the hand and foot bones are also partial
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818:high degree and low degree of what?
796:"to speculate with any confidence"
670:from australopithecines brain size
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988:All media licensed appropriately.
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737:it's supposed to gloss arboreal
730:"in the trees" is redundant here
679:"australopithecine brain size"
291:(at GA) I put it under Culture
280:it is a subsection of "Biology"
1:
306:Oxford defines "culture" as
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1113:15:10, 1 August 2020 (UTC)
1044:American Fisheries Society
973:13:44, 3 August 2020 (UTC)
958:02:46, 3 August 2020 (UTC)
944:15:07, 1 August 2020 (UTC)
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879:02:46, 3 August 2020 (UTC)
865:15:07, 1 August 2020 (UTC)
845:but early hominins possess
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617:Great use of media overall
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179:"proposed to have been"
1069:Like I said, optional.
1010:high quantities of meat
991:Neutral, stable, broad
543:Ma is adjective format
172:simpler without "being"
1138:User:Dunkleosteus77
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847:probably possessed?
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922:What are knappers?
899:it's just a foot (
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18:Talk:Homo habilis
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117:Article talk
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81:Instructions
1094:MOS:NUMERAL
1050:Editage.com
332:Homo naledi
289:Neanderthal
104:visual edit
200:Same here
48:Authorship
34:GA toolbox
758:walking).
144:Reviewer:
71:Templates
62:Reviewing
27:GA Review
1004:Optional
929:one who
157:contribs
76:Criteria
1038:places.
127:history
108:history
94:Article
1122:Enwebb
1071:Enwebb
950:Enwebb
871:Enwebb
650:added
404:Enwebb
347:, and
316:Enwebb
147:Enwebb
962:done
931:knaps
825:done
767:done
708:done
598:done
515:done
500:Same
479:done
449:done
278:Human
257:done
214:done
136:Watch
16:<
1126:talk
1075:talk
954:talk
875:talk
408:talk
320:talk
236:The
151:talk
123:edit
100:edit
310:or
242:are
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