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233 Sentences With "lineages"

How to use lineages in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lineages" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lineages". Mastering all the usages of "lineages" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"In the Canary Islands indigenous people, we find typical North African lineages, but also some other lineages with a Mediterranean distribution, and also some lineages that are of sub-Saharan African origin," Dr. Fregel said.
By comparing the mutations in different animal lineages, scientists can estimate how much earlier the common ancestor of those lineages lived.
The researchers found lineages that were known only from the central part of North Africa, as well as more common lineages from other parts of North Africa, Europe and the Near East.
But overshadowing those lineages is a sprawling menagerie of bacteria.
The Straussian lineages, and their fierce schisms, are notoriously complex.
"There are a few genetic differences between the African and Asian lineages, and it looks like the Asian lineages may be better able to transmit and flourish in a human population," he told Reuters.
This founding group diverged into two lineages about 20,000 years ago.
Similar results have been demonstrated in other cell lineages as well.
Their lineages have been extinct for tens of millions of years.
Later — approximately 400,000 years ago — the Neanderthal and Denisovan lineages split.
Even more so if it happens in several different mammal lineages.
Less than 100,000 years ago, this group split into new lineages.
Wild scarlet macaws can be divided into seven genetic lineages, but all 14 of the ancient macaws seemed to originate from just one of those lineages, one whose genetic markers are relatively uncommon in modern birds.
This discovery shows that unique lineages were surviving in the mid-Tertiary.
Q: This has happened independently in many lineages of rove beetles. How?
And the practice of death meditation is common across many Buddhist lineages.
Many Indians view Dalits as "polluted" based on their familial lineages and occupations.
An Etruscan identity appeals because it suggests atavistic lineages and a regional allegiance.
Once there, multiple lineages of mutants competed for dominance within the same space.
The team hasn't determined if the new lineages are entire species or subspecies.
Three Kentucky lineages converge in the novel: one white, one black, one equine.
This isn't entirely surprising, because multicellularity has evolved many times in different lineages.
Some may belong to living lineages of animals, while others are long extinct.
Influenza B viruses don't have subtypes but are broken down by strains and lineages.
"By inference, these two lineages arose at the same point in time," Aime said.
These shared lineages may have been conserved to reduce fear and enable social behaviors.
Their research also suggested that Denisovans divided early in their history into two lineages.
Mr. Serkin was descended from storied musical lineages on both sides of his family.
Novels, too, have lineages, and Morgan's own literary ancestry is extensive, as she acknowledges.
About 445,000 to 473,000 years ago, that common ancestor's descendants split into two lineages.
"We're looking for cells that have the ability to differentiate into different lineages," says Selden.
Hypothetically, if one group is bred with another, their separate lineages could become genetically extinct.
The orangutan and Gigantopithecus evolutionary lineages split about 12 million years ago, the researchers said.
The Central Indo-Pacific is so diverse largely because many old lineages have settled there.
Because ctenophore lineages are so ancient, their adaptations can shed light on larger evolutionary questions.
In the new study, the scientists estimate those two lineages split about 0003,2000 years ago.
"The amazing thing is that those few surviving lineages became very diverse," Dr. Simões said.
For this penguin dating service to work, documenting familial lineages is critical to avoiding inbreeding.
Some prominent family lineages are on full display, recounted at debutante and Mardi Gras balls.
When they had finished, the scientists found that the cells belonged to five main lineages.
The team also found four new lineages exclusive to Gran Canaria and two eastern islands.
Some of their lineages have since faded away, including the intimidating 60-foot-long Megalodon.
The new study shows how the divide between these two important dinosaur lineages may have transpired.
Researchers drew the conclusion after analyzing lineages on the dinosaurs using fossil information and computing statistics.
In other words, completely separate lineages can resemble each other across both continents, and across time.
Many researchers assume that human and ape lineages diverged some 5 to 7 million years ago.
Begun said climate change may explain why there was a split between human and chimp lineages.
The one modern artist in these lineages she has a clear affinity to is Agnes Martin.
That created two Catholic lineages in China: those appointed by Beijing and those by the Vatican.
According to Munster, only specific coronavirus lineages, called betacoronaviruses, can nest in humans&apos respiratory tracts. 
The findings showed that the animal belonged to one of the otter's oldest and most primitive lineages.
By comparing transposons in bats and nine other mammals, she could see which pieces many lineages shared.
After this fateful divorce, the two human lineages were on their own, embarking upon different evolutionary paths.
"We found that almost all major lineages of Mycobacterium leprae are present in medieval Europe," said Schuenemann.
He recalled the legends of medieval knights meeting on the road and stopping to recite their lineages.
Remarkably, the scientists didn't have to go to extreme places to find many of their new lineages.
Kohistani villages are made up of several familial lineages, each of which has representation on the jirga.
But Dr. Egizi said she has found three mitochondrial DNA lineages, meaning at least three females arrived.
She founded Lineages in 1983, before most computerized databases and long before $99 mail-order DNA reports.
Cells from those lineages migrated in different directions, eventually helping to produce different organs — including the brain.
Adaptation and speciation are ongoing processes that are happening in lineages all over the planet all the time.
What does it mean to have these new forms of life that contain genes from really diverse lineages?
This meant that rod cells evolved at separate points in history for mammals and all other vertebrate lineages.
We shall probably have to reevaluate the timing of appearance of major lineages in the tree of life.
The giant otters featured large, powerful jaws, and enlarged bunodont (rounded, cusped) teeth, characteristic of other otter lineages.
My arrival and the disappearance of varied multimillion-year-old lineages of animals and plants is no coincidence.
"But obviously there was some adaptive advantage because we see it multiple times in different lineages of theropods."
Although government and employers have assumed more responsibility in recent years, the foundation for insurance has multiple lineages.
How could this behavior evolve and persist in so many lineages, even when it doesn't directly aid reproduction?
But there were a number of other lineages of humans, such as Neanderthals, that existed in that age.
The study, one of the first of its kind, compared genome sequences across diverse lineages of mammals and birds.
Like Jason Wu, Prabal Gurung and Theallet, they were diverse, with backgrounds and lineages from all over the world.
Ovulatory cycles evolved in only a few lineages of mammals, including our own, Dr. Pavlicev and Dr. Wagner found.
Sometimes, this results in a noticeable difference between the two lineages, but other times, discrepancies are harder to find.
In the future, Dr. Wales says, looking into the lineages of even more ancient seeds could help breeding efforts.
From these royal lineages to the more democratic-spirited creations of today's artisans, handmade blossoms remain a proud tradition.
It showed that several distinct lineages of baleen whales became giants around the same time, independently of one another.
So there are other examples of that, so-called meta-organisms that contain different kinds of life from diverse lineages.
Many independent lineages from that kind of free-living ancestral condition have undergone this transition to life inside ant societies.
According to DNA lineages, vertebrate ancestors possessed mainly cone-dominant retinas, which would have made them better suited for daylight.
Okay, so there's been some free love between gray wolves and coyotes over the past century, resulting in hybrid lineages.
Each of the eight recruited their own slaves, in separate groups called lineages, and those slaves in turn recruited others.
Birds accumulate mutations in their DNA at a roughly clocklike rate, allowing scientists to estimate when their lineages branched apart.
In the time of the dinosaurs, the Cretaceous period, there were many bird lineages with all kinds of different teeth.
The Gondwana forests were designated world heritage sites, in part, because they support an astounding diversity of ancient songbird lineages.
There were many such lineages of lamas in Tibet, and the Dalai Lama was just one of them until 1642.
The first primates evolved roughly 80 million years ago, and then split into the living lineages over millions of years.
Once domesticated, this lineage of cats, called IV-A, gradually migrated north where they founded feline lineages in central Eurasia.
Eventually, multiple lineages of mutants competed for the same space, with winning strains moving on to areas with higher drug doses.
Dr. vonHoldt and her colleagues found no evidence that red wolves or Eastern wolves belonged to distinct lineages of their own.
But there could have been a very different path of evolution in which different spider lineages independently arrived at the design.
And if species are constantly swapping genes, perhaps different biological lineages are not distinct, disconnected branches on the tree of life.
ISTANBUL — Earlier this year, Turkey opened its closely guarded population register, a monumental archive of lineages going back to Ottoman times.
Gregory, for one, maintained that spontaneous change happened too slowly to account for the dramatic morphing of genome size in many lineages.
Was there a single evolutionary event that spawned the ability — or did it arise multiple times in multiple lineages, independently, over time?
"This is pretty strong genomic evidence for hybridization among multiple lineages in baleen whales, which is pretty exciting, I think," he said.
It occurred to Dr. Walsh that he could use the mutations to reconstruct the cell lineages — to learn how they had originated.
Cambridge biologist Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, whose work focuses on the development of cell lineages, has long sought the development of an artificial embryo.
The genetic result is that the Scythian horses are much less inbred than modern counterparts descended from a small number of cherished lineages.
One popular theory suggests that tyrannosaurs capitalized on niches left open by top predator lineages that went extinct—for instance, the Allosaurus clan.
But for veterans and those seeking truly lavish fish, the breeding farm sells enormous, majestic koi, with Japanese lineages, for upwards of $2,000.
Fossil and genetic evidence seems to suggest our two groups developed alongside one another, with multiple doggy lineages splitting off along the way.
Why did George R.R. Martin go to such great lengths regarding hair color as it pertains to lineages just to abandon it now?
While Kumimanu belonged to an early lineage of big penguins, other lineages produced their own giants as recently as 27 million years ago.
When he was just an embryonic ball in the womb, five lineages of cells had emerged, each with a distinct set of mutations.
In the 22s, geneticists noted that type B viruses seemed to have split into two distinct, evolutionary lineages based on studying their Has.
They dubbed the lineages B/Victoria for a reference stain isolated in Australia and B/Yamagata after a reference strain isolated in Japan.
For many, the last few years of Saturn in Capricorn offered lessons on commitment, ancestral lineages, discipline, personal and professional boundaries, and responsibility.
It's unlikely that the feather belongs to any lineages of modern birds, since those don't show up for another 25 million years or so.
Using a statistical model, they found that several distinct lineages of baleen whales developed independently of one another starting around 4.5 million years ago.
They concluded that although all three plants evolved in distantly-related lineages, the plants became carnivorous due to similar genetic alterations involving key enzymes.
Among the most basic elements of the tree figure is continuous divergence, only divergence, through the passage of time and the lineages of creatures.
These creatures are descended from ancestors that lived in the Cambrian period 525 million years ago, making them one of the oldest animal lineages.
But horizontal gene transfer also poses a major challenge to the Darwinian concept of evolution, in which species evolve over time into separate lineages.
"The Permian extinction opened the way for the origin of these lineages, and opened up opportunities for colonizing land and sea," Dr. Simões said.
The search has turned up fossils belonging to many living lineages of animals, and reaching back 542 million years ago, to the Cambrian Period.
Presented by the World Music Institute at Symphony Space, the two-day (and too-short) event illuminates some of Indian dance's many complex lineages.
Yet they are both products of the same process: lineages of cells that gain new mutations not found in the rest of the body.
But the best evidence suggests our two lineages speciated from each other roughly seven million years ago, which is quite a long time ago evolutionarily.
As she and Feschotte suspected, the bat lineages had churned through base pairs, dumping more than 1 billion while accruing only another few hundred million.
Once they established the L0 timeline, they were able to align it with sub-lineages and subsequently, the culture, geography and language of those branches.
However, as much as the new sequel bridges gaps to various "Potter" lineages and personalities, it also ties into real-world history in intriguing fashion.
Ambopteryx longibrachium likely points to changes in wing structure around the time that scansoriopterygids, a family of climbing and gliding dinosaurs, split with bird lineages.
Her work at the museum alights with a strong shift in modernist scholarship to consider artists overshadowed by the field's emphasis on Euro-American lineages.
The common ancestor of chimps and humans lived with oral herpes, so both lineages carried HSV-1 after they split some 7 million years ago.
It's also possible, though, that a single founding population may have migrated into Beringia and lingered there long enough for the two lineages to branch apart.
Artwork by Grimoire Once upon a time, when we had nothing better to discuss, martial artists argued over lineages and the minute details of basic form.
Humans, Neanderthals, and Denisovans all remained distinct lineages, separated by genetics, geography, and perhaps even culture until the latter two died out around 40,000 years ago.
And weak claims to Indigenous lineages are a big problem, according to Labate, perhaps the most published author on current social issues relating to Indigenous psychedelics.
A member of the Shapiro team, John W. Ives of the University of Alberta, said its dating of the split in bison lineages was more plausible.
They identified 4 main lineages of the fungus, 3 of which are distributed globally and one, which demonstrates the most genetic diversity, found only in Korea.
All-female lineages have previously been documented in a few ant and honey bee species, but their colonies are already dominated by queens and female workers.
Looking more closely at 101 genomes, they found that three different lineages of deep sea fish had extra copies of genes for seeing in dim light.
And the virus had split into two lineages — called Yangtze and Pearl, after the river deltas in which each was spreading — complicating efforts to make vaccines.
Some researchers are even identifying the genetic contributions modern humans might have made to those other lineages, in a complete reversal of the usual scientific focus.
The study demonstrates that there's still much more to learn about how different lineages of vertebrates evolved — even by looking at anatomy we thought we understood.
Dr. Reich and his colleagues can trace the major lineages of people back to common ancestors who lived in Africa between 200,000 and 250,000 years ago.
"It seems we have four lineages splitting at the same time," said Mark Lipson, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard and an author of the new study.
One thing the Whitney confronts well is how not only were slaves' bodies taken from them, but also their histories, their lineages, not to mention their names.
So when populations decline, such as when new species diverge, the odds increase that lineages will drift toward larger genomes, even if organisms become slightly less fit.
Nearly neutral theory also had problems, Kern said: It did not explain, for example, why the rate of evolution varies as observed among different lineages of organisms.
The researchers believe that this fossil sheds light on the fact that there were other lineages of these dinosaurs before they all evolved to have similar features.
Many of these games have long lineages (the Battlefield series has been around since 2002), reflecting how unlikely it is that gamers will ever tire of shooters.
He'd expected stem cells located close to where the worms had burrowed into the tissue to become more active, generating new lineages and making the necessary repairs.
They have little in common other than working within lineages of postmodern dance, in which artists have long been attuned to the political implications of their medium.
Xach'itee'aanenh T'eede Gaay, they discovered, was more closely related to living Native Americans than to any other living people or to DNA extracted from other extinct lineages.
They looked at the rate of mutation in both groups, which are used as a sort of molecular clock to determine when their genetic lineages first split off.
"In particular, we did not expect such a diversity within the same cemetery, as we found three major lineages within the St. Jorgen cemetery in Denmark," she said.
The researchers say that some breeds, like the Greenland sledge dog and Siberian husky, appear to possess mixed ancestry from both Western Eurasian and East Asian dog lineages.
Meanwhile, that shift (along with other social and economic factors) transformed artisan cheese from an everyday food to a high-status, epicurean good with lineages comparable to wines.
Hayes noted that a full genome analysis could yield different results: "There could be other origins and other lineages — it's a possibility," she said during the press conference.
Work over the following decades gradually revealed why: A population of cells in the marrow could both self-renew and differentiate into various, more specialized blood cell lineages.
And lastly, in many venomous lineages, there are also non-venomous animals who have secondarily lost their toxicity, like the Marbled Sea Snake, which lost its venomous abilities.
In these films and series—especially Haunting of Hill House—families destroy themselves by unearthing the grief, abuse, mental illness, shitty parenting, and unaddressed tension buried in their lineages.
But if so, then shouldn't abiogenesis have happened multiple times in Earth's 4.5-billion-year history, spawning several biochemically distinct lineages rather than a monoculture of DNA-based life?
The company has a couple of flagship lineages under its Huawei brand name — the smaller Huawei P, the larger Huawei P Plus, and the also-larger Huawei Mate phones.
The fossils, described by scientists on Thursday, date from the first million years after the calamity and show that the surviving terrestrial mammalian and plant lineages rebounded with aplomb.
Two open questions are whether a Zika infection confers lasting immunity to the virus, and how strains from the two known lineages—one African and one Asian—might interact.
Whereas most bedbugs specialize on one host species, the lineages linked to humans are generalists that seek new hosts while maintaining the ability to switch back to old favorites.
Name changes also may present challenges for those looking to keep their lineages traceable, though Ms. Christensen said this isn't as much of an issue as one might think.
In these matte, chalky-looking panels painted with quick-drying casein on aluminum, Mr. Tessier draws from numerous lineages of art history, combining them in seamless yet curious ways.
That's the name we use now to refer to the three separate trilogies tracking the exploits of the characters and lineages first introduced in 1977's original Star Wars.
For instance, two lineages have coexisted for 60,000 generations in one of the populations, where one of them is feeding off of the product that the other one is generating.
"Looking at solenodons today, you might think of them as a strange relictual creature that, like many ancient lineages, can't keep up with modern threats," Mychajliw said in a statement.
The genetic transfer that takes place between organisms while their lineages are diverging has a hand in the emergence of adaptive traits and in the creation of new species altogether.
Most remarkably, many lineages have independently evolved the same changes in body shape and chemical gland functioning, making them rich turn for pursuing deep questions about physical and behavioral evolution.
"We observed significant genetic divergence in the modern humans' earliest maternal sub-lineages that indicates our ancestors migrated out of the homeland between 130,000 and 110,000 years ago," Hayes said.
The researchers found 13 species from the three lineages of deep-sea fish that had a proliferation of genes controlling rhodopsin, apparently letting the fish use rods to detect colors.
Dr. Willerslev argues that the Alaskan and American bison lineages analyzed by the Shapiro team could have become distinct before, not during, the merger of the glaciers 23,000 years ago.
There's no consensus, but I think one of the ways it's been answered is the idea that, actually, the fact that there are organisms that contain multiple lineages is not new.
These genetic samplings — including some more than 212,2800 years old — bolster some theories of what may have happened, but also bring forth new questions, particularly about new lineages that were discovered.
He looked at other interesting images that had emerged on Picbreeder, traced their lineages, and realized that nearly all of them had evolved by way of something that looked completely different.
Here's how Carl Zimmer at the New York Times explains it: The first primates evolved roughly 80 million years ago, and then split into the living lineages over millions of years.
Many of these venomous lineages evolved their toxic cocktails independently, thus by studying these groups and the toxins they wield, we can gain a better understanding of how novel adaptations arise.
While all beings are related, Darwin intimated, it should be possible to classify all living things into distinct lineages of more closely related species — branches — based on their shared evolutionary histories.
As the new research shows, 88 percent of frog species are descended from three main lineages —hyloidea, microhylidae and the natatanura—that emerged during the transition from the Cretaceous to the Paleogene.
However, genetic models showed that the near-equal contributions of Neanderthal and Denisovan DNA was a far better match for the scenario in which the individual's parents descended from distinct hominin lineages.
Yet they also leave labs with few essential personnel to preserve mice of critical genetic lineages (or "strains") and crucial research resources -- and no one to progress most of the ongoing experiments.
The mercurial hip-hop dancer Raphael Xavier brings his pared-down "Point of Interest," and Ragamala Dance Company explores the textures of night in "Nocturne," drawing on lineages of classical Indian dance.
The Northern bears are now part of a growing graveyard of extinct high-born lineages, which also includes the Baratheons (Gendry is but an unlegitimized bastard), Tyrells, Martells, Umbers, and Boltons (good riddance).
He argues that the language may have originated there and then migrated south—suggesting that the "corrupt" forms of Arabic spoken around the region may, in fact, have lineages older than classical Arabic.
The researchers then compared egg shapes across different bird lineages, taking into consideration what the birds eat, where they make their nests, how big they are, and how good they are at flying.
A new study outlines how cats went from pest-controllers to human companions and found that most cats come from one of two major lineages of felines from the Near East and Egypt.
This is why you can identify the particular paths followed by the women or men of your heritage based on your "haplogroup," or the families of lineages that descend from a common ancestor.
The researchers then traced living species back in time, using an evolutionary tree, statistics and computer simulations to infer where their ancestors originated and when their lineages might have moved to different places.
With every fossil discovered, with every DNA analysis performed, the story gets more complex: We, the sole survivors of the genus Homo, harbor genetic fragments from other closely related but long-extinct lineages.
Mr. Harrison, an alto saxophonist from New Orleans, has long retrofitted various musical lineages from his hometown into his post-bop style, which is often also spiced with a quiet-storm-radio flavor.
It's a storied element of modern dance lineages: Dancers leave a company to become choreographers, then struggle to distinguish themselves from the company style, as children strive to differentiate themselves from their parents.
And often nature doesn't provide a clear cutoff between one species and another (as often different lineages on the tree of life continue to mate with one another occasionally after they've split apart).
Adaptive introgression can in turn contribute significantly to adaptive radiation, a process by which one species rapidly diversifies into a large variety of types, which then form new lineages that continue to adapt independently.
If this Founding Mother survived with at least some of her offspring, there may have been some inbreeding at first, but eventually, separate lineages would develop, allowing for a greater diversity of potential mates.
"Although greater degrees of PCD ancestry may remain in American dogs that have not yet been sampled, our results suggest that European dogs almost completely replaced native American dog lineages," according to the study.
According to Nick Sheedy, a researcher at Lineages, Ms. Cerny's family history and genealogical research company, he and Ms. Cerny signed up with "every database out there" and the process took about nine months.
Image: Lida Xing"Our comparisons of the skeleton of these new frog fossils indicate that these amber-preserved frogs were 'true frogs' but may represent one of the most ancient lineages seen today," said Blackburn.
One swipe at a time, Mutual is uniting the Mormon diaspora, perpetuating lineages, and addressing the anxieties of youth facing familial and cultural pressure, as well as a personal desire, to marry within their faith.
These theories seem to draw on other long-standing conspiracy theory lineages as well, like deep-state conspiracies, which have been circulating for much of the last century by groups on the left and right.
William Cordova, Jorge González and Ronny Quevedo draw on indigenous constructions of space — including pre-Columbian ball courts, temples and weaving methods — while thoughtfully infusing their installation with contemporary elements, in the process tracing lineages.
Because these oddball parasite sequences didn't appear in other mammals, they were likely to have invaded after bats diverged from other lineages, perhaps picked up from an insect snack some 30 to 40 million years ago.
It is much more common, for instance, to see President Obama and House Speaker Paul Ryan described as manifestations of their own carefully crafted political personas (cerebral; wonky) rather than as heirs of distinct political lineages.
The right patterns of weighted connections can stand in for behaviors in living populations: For example, connections that make it more likely that lineages will become isolated from the rest of a population can represent migrations.
In 1981, many of the world's leading cosmologists gathered at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, a vestige of the coupled lineages of science and theology located in an elegant villa in the gardens of the Vatican.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell responded to an NBC News report that his great-grandparents owned slaves by saying that both he and former President Barack Obama have slave owners in their lineages and oppose reparations.
I can't help but see Hispanic American support for these statues and commemorations—with appeals to Catholicism, Hispanic heritage, and the blessings of Spanish "civilization"—as strikingly reminiscent of these early intellectual lineages within Spanish fascism.
To Tang and Xiao, the physical characteristics in the fossils suggest that species was a chlorophyte, one of the two main lineages of green algae—but not the one that most scientists think produced land plants.
The title evokes the very long line of the U.S.-Mexico border, of course, and the linear journey of driving that border, but also the long and tangled lineages of the people who populate the borderlands.
By focusing on the bonds formed by women artists across the decades at Boston University, the exhibition highlights the conversations that arise through these channels of influence and examines the multiple artistic lineages of women artists.
The son of real-estate king Steven Roth, the billionaire head of Vornado Realty, and Daryl Roth, famed producer of seven Pulitzer Prize-winning plays, has "completely merged" his parental lineages, by becoming a Broadway titan himself.
Though the new paper traces domestic feline ancestry back to two major hubs of cat domestication, it's clear that there was plenty of crossbreeding and hybridization between the IV-A and IV-C lineages along the way.
The place has spun stories around itself since the Vikings wrote down their Sagas, tales of family lineages and heroic deeds, in the 12th century — some of which went on to inspire a novelist named George R.R. Martin.
As development proceeds, these embryonic (and later fetal) stem cells become more specialized, differentiating into the precursors of various cell lineages, which in turn give rise to more mature cells: blood cells, nerve cells, muscle cells, intestinal cells.
It's believed that wolves were the first animal to be domesticated by humans, somewhere between 30,000 and 10,000 years ago in Eurasia, and since then, our two species have forged a mutually beneficial partnership; our lineages inextricably entwined.
Sankararaman said this extinct species seems to have diverged roughly 650,000 years ago from the evolutionary line that led to Homo sapiens, before the evolutionary split between the lineages that led to our species and to the Neanderthals.
However, he goes on to assert that the expansion of a critical infrastructure to support artists' experimentation, to make their work comprehensible to collectors, dealers, and curators, to establish the lineages within which they are operating, is pivotal.
Seen as a new wave of American traditional metal, by fans, bands, and metal media alike, the scene and its adherents draw from multiple musical lineages, and seek to emulate a certain feel, rather than adhering strict genre demarcations.
In the case of the Tiv, writing forces the group's elders to confront the fact that they have differing views on their own family lineages, and that they no longer believe in the same historical narrative of the tribe.
What they found is that, broadly speaking, the number of neurons scales with 'intelligence,' and that across different evolutionary lineages, the size of the brain is related either to the size of the neurons or to the number of neurons.
"This is an interesting and nuanced study that adds context to the end-Cretaceous mass extinction event among two major lineages of sharks," Neil Aschliman, an evolutionary biologist at St. Ambrose University who wasn't involved with the new research, told Gizmodo.
The ensuing genetic analysis showed that Siberian unicorns split from modern rhinos around 43 million years ago, "settling a debate based on fossil evidence and confirming that the two lineages had diverged by the Eocene," the researchers wrote in the study.
The number of families in Asia looking to sell was higher that the average of family businesses polled globally - which came in at about 20 percent - in the 2014 survey, most likely due to shorter corporate lineages in Asia, Ng added.
Going into events like the Toronto International Film Festival, it's easy to predict a few of the hot-ticket hits — the movies that built major buzz at other festivals, or that come with particularly high-powered cast-and-crew lineages.
Researchers analyzed the genomes of 101 fish species and found that three lineages of deep-sea fish, living up to about a mile (1,500 meters) below the surface, boast a specialized visual system to allow for color vision in inky blackness.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell responded to an NBC News report that his great-grandparents owned slaves by saying that both he and former President Barack Obama have slave owners in their lineages and oppose reparations for the descendants of slaves.
" She was also advertising an upcoming trip to Mexico, where she will, she promises, create "protection and prosperity" of attendees' lineages for seven generations, guarantee them "healthy and genius children," and abolish "diseases of any severity as well as chronic diseases.
Peter Paul Rubens (22020-1640) and Paulus Pontius (1603-1658), Petrvs Pavlvs Rvbbens delineavit (Antverpiae [Antwerp]: Alexander Voet, 1640 and 1652), Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado, Library, Bord/178Drawing books promoted their creators' artworks across borders, and established artistic lineages.
For an exhibition as scrupulous as "Gender Bending Fashion" is about providing a map of the way-stations along the arc of gender identity and expression — "agender" to "genderqueer" to nonbinary to trans — the effort to establish lineages can seem disappointingly attenuated.
Adding to the uncertainty, some animal lineages seem less susceptible to cancer than others: Crocodiles and a few other reptiles, along with sharks and naked mole rats, are rarely troubled by the disease, while tumors in invertebrates don't much resemble those of vertebrates.
"In a conservation context, hybridization is usually seen as negative simply because the mantra of conservational biology is to protect species and lineages as they evolve, on the landscape they evolved in," said Bradley Shaffer, a conservation biologist at the University of California, Los Angeles.
The new study expands on a series of findings in recent years showing that the ancestors of modern humans once shared the planet with a surprising number of near relatives — lineages like the Neanderthals and Denisovans that became extinct tens of thousands of years ago.
In light of our evolutionary background, which features bold tetrapods crawling from ancestral oceans to seed new lineages on land, it's not too much of a stretch to picture our distant descendants inhabiting very different forms, perhaps even bodies adapted to the deep sea.
Katie Gibbons from Buffalo, N.Y., credits family food choices with making her more open-minded: My parents were both raised in lower middle class households with Northern European lineages; essentially, meat and potatoes were their way of life and seasoning was a four-letter-word.
Many of the traumatized men and women I met abroad — I interviewed more than a dozen exiles living in different European cities, in addition to many people inside Turkey — believe that families are being deliberately destroyed, as if the aim is to end lineages.
It is in the two-dimensional works that another of Ms. Merz's strengths emerges: She has no anxiety about showing her influences, and she is known for leaving many works undated, which indicates a striking indifference to the rankings and lineages of art history.
Gillian Walsh has been interested in these themes of structural lineages and oppositions: the inside and outside of a dancer in a dance, what's visible and what's hidden, what we are supposed to see and not, how and why we attribute merit and value.

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