Evolution: A Scientific American ReaderScientific American University of Chicago Press, 2008 M09 15 - 312 páginas From the Scopes “Monkey Trial” of 1925 to the court ruling against the Dover Area School Board’s proposed intelligent design curriculum in 2005, few scientific topics have engendered as much controversy—or grabbed as many headlines—as evolution. And since the debate shows no signs of abating, there is perhaps no better time to step back and ask: What is evolution? Defined as the gradual process by which something changes into a different and usually more complex and efficient form, evolution explains the formation of the universe, the nature of viruses, and the emergence of humans. A first-rate summary of the actual science of evolution, this Scientific American reader is a timely collection that gives readers an opportunity to consider evolution’s impact in various settings. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 82
... Ancestor to Call Our Own kate wong 260 Early Hominid Fossils from Africa meave leakey and alan walker 269 Planet of the Apes david r. begun 280 Once We Were Not Alone ian tattersall 291 Out of Africa Again . . . and Again? ian ...
... ancestor have similar RNA base sequences . Those organisms closest to the " root " —or last common ancestor of all living organisms — are hyper- thermophiles , which live in hot water , possibly as high as 115 degrees C. This ...
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Contenido
Cellular Evolution | 85 |
Dinosaurs and Other Monsters | 169 |
Human Evolution | 249 |
Contents | 362 |
Illustration Credits | 364 |
The Evolution of the Universe | 1 |
Cellular Evolution | 85 |
Dinosaurs and Other Monsters | 169 |
Human Evolution | 249 |