john hawks weblog

paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

Bibliography

Found 33 results
Filters: Keyword is *file-import-10-07-15 and Author is Smith, F. H.  [Clear All Filters]
2000
Minugh-Purvis N, Radovčić J, and Smith FH. 2000. Krapina 1: A juvenile Neandertal from the early late Pleistocene of Croatia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 111:393–424.
1999
Smith FH, Trinkaus E, Pettitt PB, Karavanic I, and Paunovic M. 1999. Direct radiocarbon dates for Vindija G1 and Velika Pecina Late Pleistocene hominid remains. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, U. S. A. 96:12281–12286.
1997
Simek JF, and Smith FH. 1997. Chronological changes in stone tool assemblages from Krapina (Croatia. Journal of Human Evolution 32:561–575.
1994
Smith FH, and Ahern JC. 1994. Additional cranial remains from Vindija Cave, Croatia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 93:275–280.
Trinkaus E, and Smith FH. 1994. Body size of the Vindija Neandertals. Journal of Human Evolution 28:201–208.
Frayer DW, Wolpoff MH, Thorne AG, Smith FH, and Pope GG. 1994. Getting it straight. American Anthropologist 96:424–438.
1993
Frayer DW, Wolpoff MH, Smith FH, Thorne AG, and Pope GG. 1993. The fossil evidence for modern human origins. American Anthropologist 95:14–50.
1992
Smith FH. 1992. Models and realities in modern human origins: the African fossil evidence. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series B 337:243–250.
1991
Simmons T, Falsetti AB, and Smith FH. 1991. Frontal bone morphometrics of southwest Asian Pleistocene hominids. Journal of Human Evolution 20:249–269.
Simmons T, and Smith FH. 1991. Human population relationships in the late Pleistocene. Current Anthropology 32:623–627.
1989
Smith FH, Falsetti AB, and Donnelly SM. 1989. Modern Human Origins. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 32:35–68.
1988
Radovčić J, Smith FH, Trinkaus E, and Wolpoff MH. 1988. The Krapina Hominids: An Illustrated Catalog of the Skeletal Collection. Zagreb: Mladost Press and the Croatian Natural History Museum.
Wolpoff MH, Spuhler JN, Smith FH, Radovčić J, Pope G, Frayer DW, Eckhardt R, and Clark G. 1988. Modern human origins. Science 241:772–773.
1985
Smith FH, Boyd DC, and Malez M. 1985. Additional Upper Pleistocene human remains from Vindija cave, Croatia, Yugoslavia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 68:375–383.
Smith FH. 1985. Continuity and change in the origin of modern \\emphHomo sapiens. Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Anthropologie 75:197–222.
1983
Smith FH. 1983. On hominid evolution in south-central Europe. Current Anthropology 24:236–237.
1978
Smith FH. 1978. The evolutionary significance of the mandibular foramen area in Neandertals. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 48:523–531.
1977
Smith FH. 1977. On the application of morphological "dating" to the hominid fossil record. Journal of Anthropological Research 33:302–316.
1976
Smith FH. 1976. A fossil hominid frontal from Velika Peina (Croatia) and a consideration of Upper Pleistocene hominids from Yugoslavia. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 44:127–134.
Smith FH. 1976. The Neandertal remains from Krapina: A descriptive and comparative study. University of Tennessee Department of Anthropology Reports of Investigations 15:1–359.
Smith FH. 1976. The Neandertal Remains from Krapina: A Descriptive and Comparative Study. University of Tennessee Department of Anthropology Reports of Investigations 15:1–359.
Smith FH. 1976. The Neanderthal remains from Krapina, northern Yugoslavia: an inventory of the Upper limb remains. 275-290: Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Anthropologie 67.
Smith FH. 1976. The skeleton remains of the earliest Americans: A survey. Tennessee Anthropologist 1:116–147.

About the bibliography

My bibliography database represents years of work by many people. The core of the database was compiled by Milford Wolpoff, with contributions from many students and coauthors. I have added substantially to the database during the last fifteen years, and since I have been blogging all new entries are linked by Digital Object Identifier numbers to their place of publication.

If you find the database useful, please take time to thank the people who worked hard to compile it. I know they will appreciate hearing it.

This database began as a flat text file of bibliographic entries, which I have over the years scripted into a computer-readable format. Many errors have slipped in, including typos from the initial data entry, script fragments from my BibTeX database, and some entries that began in a non-standard format and were scrambled by scripts. Please do not write me expecting that I will fix these errors. It would take me weeks of work to do this. Works will be fixed as I cite them or enter updated information for them.

There are also errors of omission. Most entries are here because they got cited, in Milford's books, in the many research articles by him or his students, or in my work. I mention this mainly because I know that some of you will look up your own names, and find many important papers missing from the database. If you're disappointed in the representation of your articles here, by all means contact me and I will work with you. This database is mirrored on CiteULike and Mendeley and I can import your bibliographic data from these sites, EndNote, BibTeX or other standard formats.

A fuller introduction to the bibliography is in my initial announcement.

Neandertals

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Denisova

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Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.