evolution

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
a
Alias: 
evolution

Unstoppable us

2022
"From learning to make fire and using the stars as guides to cooking meals in microwaves and landing on the moon, prepare to uncover the secrets and superpowers of how we evolved from our first appearances millions of years ago"--Provided by publisher.

The Magic School Bus explores human evolution

An introduction to evolution that explores how life developed on Earth.

Amazing evolution

the journey of life
Text and illustrations look at evolution.

The Leakeys

the family that traced human origins to Africa
Known as the First Family of Paleontology, the Leakey family's fascinating archaeological and paleontological finds in Africa stunned the world and reset prevailing notions about human evolution.

What it means to be 98% chimpanzee

apes, people, and their genes
2003
Explores the meaning of the genetic similarity of humans to apes and its implications for understanding human nature; examines genetic variances within humans, especially with regard to race; and looks at the ways in which technical and cultural knowledge intersect in the conflict between science and religion.
Cover image of What it means to be 98% chimpanzee

Optical allusions

2014
Contains a collection of stories that describe the adventures of Winkles the Wonder Brain after he is sent to find his bosses' lost eye, and he learns about the evolution of vision along the way.

A history of life in 100 fossils

Provides a history of life by examining one hundred fossil discoveries.

Origins of life

2021
Explores the origins of life, what the first signs of life were, who were the first humans, and more.

History of the world in comics

"A paleontologist and a storyteller take two children through the birth of our planet to the present day, covering major geological periods and the evolution of life on Earth"-- Provided by publisher.

Charles Darwin

2021
"Discover the life of Charles Darwin, the scientist who changed the way people see the world. Although he didn't do very well at school, Charles Darwin was passionately curious about wildlife, humans and plants. After a journey to South America, he developed his landmark theory: that all living things are related"--OCLC.

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