Biology
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New Data Platform Illuminates History of Humans' Environmental Impact
GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- The human environmental footprint is not only deep but old. Ancient traces of this footprint can be found in animal bones, shells, scales and antlers at archaeological sites. Together, these specimens tell the millennia-long story of how humans have hunted, domesticated and transported animals, altered landscapes and responded to environmental changes such as shifting temperatures and sea levels.
Latest Research Articles
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Color Vision Found in Fish that Live in Near Darkness
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Researchers Document the Oldest Known Trees in Eastern North America
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Remarkable Fish See Color in Deep, Dark Water
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Close relatives can coexist: Two Flower Species Show us How
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Paper Wasps Capable of Behavior that Resembles Logical Reasoning
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New Species of Fish Parasite Named after Xena, the Warrior Princess
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Ancient Ritual Bundle Contained Multiple Psychotropic Plants
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Even More Amphibians are Endangered than We Thought
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UNH researchers discover new strain of canine distemper in wild animals in NH, VT
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Cooperation Among Fishers can Improve Fish Stock in Coral Reefs
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An Evolutionary Rescue in Polluted Waters
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Peanut Genome Sequenced with Unprecedented Accuracy