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Itching And Twitching (level 4) (Hello Reader)
One evening, Monkey invited his friend Rabbit to dinner. All during the meal, Monkey itched and so he scratched Rabbit was no better. He couldn't stop twitching Both so irritated the other with their scratching and twitching that they challenged each other to a contest to see who could be still for the longest period of time. The urge to scratch and twitch continued for both friends. So they each came up with a sly plan. Each decided to tell the other a story. The trick was with each story, the storyteller used deliberate gestures that allowed him to scratch where it itched,
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Twitching & scratching: the videos of Emily Vey Duke & Cooper Battersby.: An article from: C: International Contemporary Art
This digital document is an article from C: International Contemporary Art, published by C The Visual Arts Foundation on September 22, 2002. The length of the article is 795 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Twitching & scratching: the videos of Emily Vey Duke & Cooper Battersby.
Author: Rebecca Godfrey
Publication:C: International Contemporary Art (Magazine/Journal)
Date: September 22, 2002
Publisher: C The Visual Arts Foundation
Page: 45(2)

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The single species hypothesis: truly dead and pushing up bushes, or still twitching and ripe for resuscitation?: An article from: Human Biology
This digital document is an article from Human Biology, published by Wayne State University Press on August 1, 2003. The length of the article is 7736 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

From the author: Frank Livingstone proclaims himself to be the last living proponent of the single species hypothesis. In sharp contrast, a species-rich, bushy phylogeny is favored by most human paleontologists. Is Livingstone's proclamation merely contrarian posturing, or does closer inspection warrant reconsideration of just how speciose the hominin lineage is? The high-speciation perspective draws on evidence of speciosity in the Cercopithecoidea and punctuated equilibria theory for support. If blue monkeys and redtail monkeys are indistinguishable skeletally, this reasoning goes, or if red colobus and black and white colobus are likewise indistinguishable, should we not expect that there are more species of hominin than is apparent from skeletal evidence alone? A contrarian perspective notes that not all monkey taxa are speciose. Importantly, two broadly distributed, partly terrestrial monkeys have not speciated at all: vervets and baboons. Nor are monkeys the first choice as a hominin speciation model. If expectations of species numbers are based on the Hominoidea, a taxon more closely related to hominins, more similar in body size, and found in more hominin-like habitats than monkeys, a single-species perspective is more appealing. No great ape genus has even two sympatric species. Moreover, despite a separation of 1.6 Ma, West African chimpanzees have not speciated from P.t. troglodytes nor P.t. schweinfurthii. It is notable that no two contemporaneous species of hominin were separated by significantly more than this interval. A biological--as opposed to an ecological or geographical--species definition would place all hominins in a single, phenotypically diverse species. Since divergence from the chimpanzee, "species" distinctness in hominins may have been maintained by temporary allopatry and centripetal niche separation. The hominin lineage may have evolved as a single, phenotypically diverse, reticulately evolving species.

Citation Details
Title: The single species hypothesis: truly dead and pushing up bushes, or still twitching and ripe for resuscitation?
Author: Kevin D. Hunt
Publication:Human Biology (Refereed)
Date: August 1, 2003
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Volume: 75 Issue: 4 Page: 485(18)

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