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A short history of nearly everythingÁ€œa vast unsupervised experiment . . .Á€«New Yorker, Á€œIce Memory,Á€« January 7, 2002, p. 36. Á€œa slight warming would enhance evaporation rates . . .Á€« Schultz, p. 72. Á€œNo less intriguing are the known ranges . . .Á€« Drury, p. 268. Á€œa retreat to warmer climes wasnÁ€™t possible.Á€« Thomas H. Rich, Patricia Vickers-Rich, and Roland Gangloff, Á€œPolar Dinosaurs,Á€« unpublished manuscript. Á€œthere is a lot more water for them to draw on . . .Á€« Schultz, p. 159. Á€œIf so, sea levels globally would rise . . .Á€« Ball, p. 75. Á€œÁ€˜Did you have a good ice age?Á€™ Á€« Flannery, The Eternal Frontier, p. 267. CHAPTER 28 THE MYSTERIOUS BIPED Á€œJust before Christmas 1887 . . .Á€«National Geographic, May 1997, p. 87. Á€œfound by railway workers in a cave . . .Á€« Tattersall and Schwartz, p. 149. Á€œThe first formal description . . .Á€« Trinkaus and Shipman, p. 173. Á€œthe name and credit for the discovery . . .Á€« Trinkaus and Shipman, pp. 3-6. Á€œT. H. Huxley in England drily observed . . .Á€« Trinkaus and Shipman, p. 59 ...» |
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