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"prehistory" Definitions
  1. [uncountable] the period of time in history before information was written down
  2. [singular] the earliest stages of the development of something

192 Sentences With "prehistory"

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

"The Office," like all of modern comedy, has a prehistory.
But their revisions are making some scholars of prehistory uneasy.
The global biomass of wild mammals has declined by 82% since prehistory.
The work in his lab has reshaped our understanding of human prehistory.
And they are likely to begin learning much more about human prehistory.
His explorations, from prehistory through post-apocalyptic ruin, resonate at many levels.
It's a missing link in the prehistory of Rust Belt avant-garde rock.
This sort of conservatism has a prehistory as ancient as scepticism and privilege.
He knows the plateau's natural history, its human history and its prehistory, too.
Way back in the prehistory of wireless, there was a company called Omnipoint.
David Brooks, Rock, Mosquito, and Hummingbird: A Prehistory of Governors Island, 2017 (detail).
Prophecy rock seemed like an outdated piece of prehistory carved on a rock.
Echoes of the matriarchal cultures that dominated prehistory lurk in our collective unconscious.
Mr Wilson traces the source of creativity to human prehistory, on the African savannah.
And the lab refrigerators are filled with bones from 2,000 more denizens of prehistory.
But their revisions to the human story are making some scholars of prehistory uneasy.
So, nonfiction by subject and then chronologically — American prehistory, Colonial history, Civil War, etc.
There may be no written records from prehistory, but genomes are a living record.
Previously, it was possible to think about prehistory as a kind of grand bazaar.
Many call the Cave of Altamira, now a Unesco site, the Sistine Chapel of prehistory.
It is a defining moment for black activism, and a significant one in Axon's prehistory.
But prehistory continues to be a mutable universe within which each generation animates its fears.
Front Burner "Delicioso," a scholarly history, looks at Spanish food from prehistory to Ferran Adrià.
This first traversal was one of the greatest and most courageous passages in human prehistory.
The vault contained smaller but valuable artifacts dating back to prehistory through to the Ottoman period.
This continues a pattern of endemic, intergroup violence in the region that goes back into prehistory.
Prehistory has this in common with the future: It is what we dream it to be.
A survey of ancient graves could also give archaeologists clues about infant mortality rates in prehistory.
The illustrated book is a dense, scholarly survey that starts with prehistory some 80,000 years ago.
It was the prehistory of a comeback as remarkable as any in contemporary Latin-American politics.
As for the carved leashes, those simple lines are the earliest known evidence of leads in prehistory.
Now we know this may be because people in the area have been making cheese since prehistory.
Paleo and Bitcoin carnivory are distinguished from other meat-centric diets by their explicit reference to prehistory.
Galili said that the wall is both a glimpse into prehistory and a warning for our future.
Archaeologists and geneticists are extracting genetic material spanning not just Iberia's written history but its prehistory, too.
Foreign, glacial stones "do seem to have been a source of wonderment in prehistory," Harris told Live Science.
Until recently, the palette of prehistory was the sole provenance of daydreams, CGI artists or kids with crayons.
Humanity's past—the far past, as in prehistory—has a curious way of creeping up into the present.
Some areas whaled in prehistory, and in modern times eating them has been mostly confined to specific regions.
But in practice, the paleogenomicists have totally altered the environment in which prehistory is being studied by everyone.
Blending nature writing with memoir and poetry, her book is an unconventional attempt to "learn prehistory hand to mouth".
But the new findings shed much-needed light on an era of prehistory that has, for ages, remained uncertain.
Major climate events have opened up land bridges during prehistory, along which animals and humans traveled to new continents.
The millions who live in these cities, though, know that there's a whole prehistory to their modernist urban experiments.
Louis's other love was Afghanistan's prehistory; he had unearthed the oldest tools and art ever found in the country.
I plodded along wondering what dreams might rumble the long sleep of Ötzi and Qin, those bookends of prehistory.
"In a way, the book is a prehistory to Trump," said David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker.
Trilobites The discovery illustrates how museum collections may be filled with forgotten fossils that could expand knowledge of prehistory.
The age of the trees allowed for a kind of backdating of Manifest Destiny, into the mists of prehistory.
They are terrifying and contemptible — dismayingly believable figures from the prehistory of what is now called the alt-right.
The familiar, high-rise models didn't evolve until recently, and much of giraffid prehistory is marked by expansive evolutionary experimentation.
He had taught her the prehistory, but he had also started the great collection of papers from the war years.
Along with the basics — the space was designed by César Pelli, constructed in 1988 — the history lingered on the prehistory.
Professor Palmer identified five streams of African diaspora, the first being the initial spread of humans from Africa in prehistory.
But somewhere in prehistory, at least one female human from Africa must have carried the child of a male Neanderthal.
By once again giving "migration" pride of place in the story of prehistory, paleogenomics has resurrected some old intellectual ghosts.
Indeed, this embalming technique dates back to the Naqada stage of Egyptian prehistory, which is substantially earlier that the Pharaonic Period.
Through such collective editing, a small part of America's jagged prehistory is sealed and separated from the trials of immigrants today.
This tragic prehistory re-emerged in the novel, which depicts the perils of parenthood and a creature that destroys its progenitor.
As it turns out, YouTube contains a treasure trove of 3GP content representing a curiously isolated period of smart-phone prehistory.
They were inhabited from prehistory until the 28s, when — overcrowded, poverty-stricken and disease-ridden — they were evacuated by the state.
The findings lend astonishing detail to a story once lost to prehistory: how and when humans spread across the Western Hemisphere.
Instead, many of these findings demand that researchers ask new questions about the human past, and envision a more complex prehistory.
Jon's father is Rhaegar Targaryen, the long-dead older brother of Dany who ran off with Lyanna during the show's prehistory.
"In our prehistory, when someone approached with hands out of view, it was a clear signal of potential danger," Goman said.
The boss may have an all-seeing panopticon, but the prehistory of every strike begins when one worker catches another's eye.
Books such as Validation of Exceptional Longevity, Exceptional Longevity: From Prehistory to the Present and Supercentenarians all deal with this methodological question.
David Brooks: I was commissioned to make a site-responsive project; it's titled Rock, Mosquito, and Hummingbird: A Prehistory of Governors Island.
David Brooks's "Rock, Mosquito, and Hummingbird: A Prehistory of Governor's Island" is open to visitors on Governors Island until October 31, 2017.
"The cave site of Monte Kronio is also a cult place used for religious practices from prehistory to Classical times," Tanasi said.
What's the evolutionary prehistory of pair-bonding—and specifically of female sexuality—and what can it tell me about my conundrums now?
It's mobile prehistory at this point, but there was once a time when the ultimate smartphone you could get was a BlackBerry.
Finally, speaking of Ned Stark, Bran's vision took him to what seems like a key moment in the prehistory of this tale.
This is the first riddle posed by Bran's explosive journey into ancient Westeros, where we dig up an extraordinary amount of prehistory.
Trilobites A discovery in a fossilized mouse could help scientists work out the true colors of dinosaurs and other creatures from prehistory.
But as a way of looking at the world, the kind of prehistory trutherism espoused by Bitcoin carnivorism is just dead boring.
With biology in the bag, Science is now subduing ethology, psychology and linguistics, and is extending links to prehistory, mythology and religion.
"The research opens up new and innovative avenues for exploring the mechanisms and context of blunt force trauma in prehistory," conclude the authors.
FOR a man who spent his career illuminating the vast, dim migrations of people in prehistory, Luca Cavalli-Sforza's life was remarkably circular.
Gibbons says they've been in south Texas since prehistory and don't get enough credit for all the pest insects and litter they consume.
The purpose of these structures built, as University of Bordeaux professor of prehistory Jacques Jaubert put it, in the "underworld" remains an enigma.
The study's authors hope their research will help Pacific islanders trace the prehistory of their tattoo culture, which is still heavily practiced today.
The thing is, he believes that these stories have much to tell us about our relation to worlds unknown and to our prehistory.
No era holds them; they exist just as easily in prehistory alongside dinosaurs as they do in the future fighting mutants with laser cannons.
The research team included scientists from McMaster University, the University of Sydney and the Luigi Pigorini National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography in Rome.
Were the ancient peoples of Göbekli Tepe trying to warn the future about the devastating consequences of climate change from the dawn of prehistory?
Ancient history: With an analysis of DNA preserved in ancient skeletons on the Iberian Peninsula, scientists are peering into human prehistory in the region.
For Dr. Haughey, a specialist in prehistory, it's about what an object can tell her about its owner rather than what value it has.
To hold a fossil is to clutch a fragment of prehistory, and "Fossils" explores what remains — personally, zoologically — of times and creatures gone by.
The Late Neolithic period was the first time in British prehistory where long-distance networks of people and livestock were created, the researchers said.
Now, as the year closes, we are given the greatest treat any enthusiast of prehistory could ask for: a preserved juvenile theropod tail in amber.
On a mischievous tune called "Liquor Up," she even hints at what could be a prehistory of that doomed affair in the album's title track.
To understand the predicament that Plaquemines is in, you have to go back to prehistory, during which, for thousands of years, the river flooded regularly.
Huge archaeological collections in museums held DNA that, once reconstructed, shed light on the genetic prehistory of the continent as far back as 2200,0003 years.
Using methods that took years to develop, scientists in Germany recovered ancient DNA from cave dirt, opening the door to new insights on human prehistory.
The song's video clip is Residente's debut as a director; it's a five-minute summary of human prehistory, full of slime, mud and special effects.
The rich prehistory of the giraffe family may be gone to us, but we can still appreciate what's left of this proud, weird tribe of mammals.
People had moved and mixed in prehistory more than he thought; and not all ancient events, as he supposed, had left their mark in modern populations.
"But somewhere in prehistory, at least one female human from Africa must have carried the child of a male Neanderthal," Carl Zimmer writes in the NYT.
Genetic evidence now suggests these individuals were members of the same extended family—a finding that's casting new light on a tumultuous era in European prehistory.
After all, the parasite had been with people since prehistory; Ötzi the Iceman, the 5,2250-year-old mummy found frozen in the Italian Alps, had whipworm.
Still, these artworks shaped our understanding of prehistory to a degree that has proved irrevocable, thus transforming the dinosaur from an elite curiosity to popular kitsch.
Their analysis, published in the journal Cell, reveals important clues to Africa's mysterious prehistory, including details of massive migrations that shaped the populations we know today.
He serves as a kind of referee after a whale is landed, dividing the catch among crews according to arcane rules that reach back to prehistory.
He is a founder of the Institute for Aegean Prehistory, which has offices in Philadelphia, and his area of research is primarily Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean civilizations.
The term analog computer probably conjures up images of a computing prehistory dominated by difference engines and slide rules, but that couldn't be further from the truth.
The findings have enriched our understanding of prehistory, shedding light on human development with evidence that can't be found in pottery shards or studies of living cultures.
Before she went into politics, Pelosi was on the board of the Leakey Foundation, which has funded major scientific breakthroughs about human prehistory by Goodall and others.
It wasn't that — there was a prehistory, 20 or so years earlier — but in between the two pulses had come the Great Migration and the Great War.
Set somewhat off from the cluster of buildings that form the main campus, the pavilion is exclusively devoted to Japanese art spanning from prehistory to the present.
What "Thrones" fan wouldn't want a mini-series or HBO movie depicting prehistory like, say, Robert's Rebellion and the events that turned Jaime Lannister into the Kingslayer?
The hoard was seized by police in 2002, and since then the roughly 12-inch in diameter disk's home has been the Halle State Museum of Prehistory.
One of the clearest-eyed is Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon, which presses ever onward, from Milkman's prehistory to his birth, childhood, adulthood, and a climactic confrontation. Simple.
In human terms, though, that timescale means how it spread and how this process intertwined with the rise of dairy farming are lost in the mists of prehistory.
From prehistory to modern elections, through military dictatorships or palace coups or by riding the power of the masses, ambitious individuals shake up their nations and change history.
Now an industry with its roots in prehistory is changing that tune, summoning up a modern set of incentives for people to get more intimate with outer space.
Two years later, while traveling in North Africa and Italy, he made drawings of fetish objects at the Luigi Pigorini National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography in Rome.
The new findings, published today in the South African Journal of Science, mark cancer's first appearance in prehistory, and further debunk its inaccurate description as a modern illness.
Digging almost anywhere in Greece will turn up traces of the past: from prehistory, the Classical Age, the Hellenistic and Roman eras, Byzantium and the Ottoman Turkish occupation.
Part of what Wilson wants is for human creative capacities to be put in a broader context that includes our prehistory and the biology of our nonhuman ancestors.
And during the island's inaugural week, there's lot more to explore: • Visit the artwork "Rock, Mosquito and Hummingbird," which tells the story of the prehistory of Governors Island.
He asked readers to contemplate the accident's prehistory: to imagine how, even as the great ship was being built, the iceberg—its "sinister mate"—had also been growing.
And that makes the music right for the world outside: the persistent breakdown of all structures, the vacated certainties and the welcoming randomness, the retreating future and imminent prehistory.
Yep, it's basically the two things I loved as a kid, Transformers and the scaly side of prehistory, smashed into each other before an engrossing sci-fi setting. Brilliant.
"Lamy Station" appears to be a consideration of the author's travels and America's westward expansion, except that he intersperses it with references to Japanese prehistory, animal life, and geology.
This era of prehistory, between 128,000 to 114,000 years ago, saw global temperatures rise to about 2 degrees Celsius higher that the average global temperature in the 20th century.
Even those written 228 years ago on prehistory and the Roman era are "completely out of date", says Mike Heyworth of the Council for British Archaeology, an educational charity.
The unique experience of queer communities in Brooklyn during this time, he argues, formed the prehistory to the modern gay liberation movement and its signal event, the Stonewall riots.
But for all its woes, the town may have found its ticket in another form of fossil fuel: human prehistory, linked to discoveries of ancient bones in the area.
In an era so bygone it might as well be prehistory, people would give out their individual pager numbers to those who needed them, be it parents or friends.
"It's been mad, watching all the advances in what we understand about European prehistory," said Jessica C. Thompson, an archaeologist at Emory University who does field work in Malawi.
This January, the Berlin Society of Anthropology, Ethnology and Prehistory announced it would return an Ainu skull, and in March Hokkaido University agreed to repatriate remains disinterred in the 1930s.
Poincheval had to stay in a sitting position inside the 3.2-metre (10 foot 6 inch) high sculpture in the gardens of a museum of prehistory in Aurignac, southwestern France.
Such questions run through Lee's many affecting poems about his life as a refugee, now part of his mind's prehistory, its episodes a hodgepodge of firsthand memories and secondhand accounts.
A small set of the casts are currently on display at the International Center of Prehistory in Les Eyzies-de-Tayac-Sireuil, France, and at the Canadian Museum of History.
Our evolutionary prehistory shows that we needed many people to help us raise our offspring, so we surrounded ourselves with those who had similar values or who looked like us.
But later archaeologists were able to date the carved stone balls to the much earlier Neolithic period of prehistory, about 5,000 years ago, when only stone tools were used, he said.
As you see in the film, it has a prehistory, I did the film forty years ago about a volcano in Guadeloupe, about one out man who refused to be evacuated.
The pelican spider is both a "living fossil" and a "Lazarus taxon" (an organism that gives the appearance of being resurrected from prehistory because its fossils were found before living versions).
"Bringing up babies in prehistory was not an easy task," said Katharina Rebay-Salisbury, a project partner from the Institute for Oriental and European Archaeology of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
And then they" — meaning all those other disciplines, which heretofore had overseen the study of prehistory — "can get on with answering what really matters, which is try to interpret what happened.
When we took over, they'd been abandoned for seven to eight years, and it took some time to sort them out," Alessio says, adding: "We don't advocate for a return to prehistory.
It was in the prehistory of 2010 that Timo Weiland, the label created by Mr. Eckstein, Mr. Weiland and Donna Kang was first hailed as one of the industry's top 10 breakouts.
One of the teams was led by Eske Willerslev, a geneticist at the University of Copenhagen who has helped revolutionize our understanding of human prehistory by collecting DNA from age-old skeletons.
Prehistory-1900s: A focus on full-figured silhouettes Some of the earliest known representations of a woman's body are the "Venus figurines," small statues from 20103,000 to 25,000 years ago in Europe.
Near the new acquisitions, a rapid parade of antique pots and bowls conjures a civilization that has passed through unparalleled heights of luxury without ever shedding the earthier tastes of its prehistory.
Perhaps it is an artifact of biology: central-nervous-system injuries were so rare in our prehistory that there was no reason for evolution to expend energy devising strategies to fix them.
What's most disappointing about Fall's fall into its parallel prehistory is that it leaves a different, more urgent book unwritten—one in which Stephenson wrestles with the chaotic fallout of today's social internet.
Their new technique, described in a study published on Thursday in the journal Science, promises to open new avenues of research into human prehistory and was met with excitement by geneticists and archaeologists.
In this interactive production, Erth, a troupe from Sydney, Australia, takes children on a multimedia tour of prehistory that uses giant, minutely detailed puppets to portray dinosaurs and a few of their forebears.
They had already played a foundational role in the prehistory of computing: During World War II, women operated some of the first computational machines used for code-breaking at Bletchley Park in Britain.
Over three broad chapters that take us from the ochres of prehistory to the neon of the gilet jaunes (yellow vest protesters) in France, we are reminded that color is mostly a cultural construction.
CreditCreditTony Cenicola/The New York Times Way, way out in the Atlantic Ocean, at a point where one of Earth's four cold water currents meets the searing African desert winds, nights are dark as prehistory.
Mr Norman proves a deft hand at evoking postwar Liverpool, the Goons, the Cavern, the many faces of the Beatles' prehistory, the St. Peter's Church fête that witnessed the frisson of John and Paul's first encounter.
The cave was used from prehistory to Classical times as a site for religious rituals, with the wine possibly offered to underground deities, said Davide Tanasi of the University of South Florida, who led that research.
But amid it all is a very different kind of show: "Neo-Prehistory: 20083 Verbs," which is on view at La Triennale, attempts to boil down the totality of life on earth today to its absolute essentials.
But in the past two decades, this style of work, dubbed "asemic writing" by poets Tim Gaze and Jim Leftwich in the late 1990s, has coalesced into a movement with a sophisticated awareness of its own prehistory.
Dr. Davis raised the large sum required with funds that had been made available by the University of Cincinnati in return for his not moving to Stanford and with a grant from the Institute for Aegean Prehistory.
One of the most beautiful things about being in Grand Staircase is that, out in the deep middle of it, with all of prehistory underfoot and twelve-billion-year-old starlight overhead, the world feels enduring and eternal.
Today, Garrod's legacy lives on not only through her contributions to archaeology and to our understanding of prehistory, but in the opening of a new academic facility—the Dorothy Garrod Building—at Newnham College on April 30, 2019.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads An infrastructure project for the expansion of the Amsterdam North/South metro line offered a rare archaeological opportunity to systematically study a drained riverbed where, since prehistory, humans have inhabited its shores.
It was history, or it almost certainly was; there may have been taller pitchers and hitters somewhere in baseball's weird prehistory, and they may well have faced each other, but no one knows well enough to say for sure.
There's precedent for it being associated with the Isle of Faces, an important, mysterious, ancient location where the Children of the Forest and First Men made a peace pact during Westeros' prehistory (see our Season 3 analysis for more).
" DiNapoli said it's entirely possible that this society went from cooperation to conflict, but there's "simply no archaeological evidence for large scale conflict among the Rapa Nui," adding that "Nearly all evidence points to a relatively peaceful society throughout prehistory.
Ever since people began writing things down, we have intermittently attempted to write everything down: the nature of the earth and the cosmos, all of prehistory and recorded time, and the political arrangements, cultural productions, and collective wisdom of humankind.
Matter The ancestors of modern humans interbred with Neanderthals and another extinct line of humans known as the Denisovans at least four times in the course of prehistory, according to an analysis of global genomes published Thursday in the journal Science.
The tools of molecular biology unlocked by their discovery have since been used to trace humanity's prehistory, devise lifesaving therapies, and develop Crispr, a gene-editing technology that was used recently, and unethically, to alter the DNA of twin human embryos.
One longtime premise is that as these early humans spread out in all directions over the land, groups of them encountered places that struck their fancy, pitched their tents and more or less stayed "home" for the duration of prehistory.
"The first time I saw the shield I was absolutely awed by it: the complex structure, the careful decorations, and the beautiful boss," said Rachel Crellin, a lecturer in late prehistory at the University of Leicester who studied the shield for impact damage.
"The results obtained with the three samples from Castelluccio become the first chemical evidence of the oldest olive oil in  Italian prehistory , pushing back the hands of the clock for the systematic olive oil production by at least 700 years," Tanasi said.
A black monolith, shaped like a domino, appears at the moment in prehistory when human ancestors discover how to use tools, and another is later found, in the year 22001, just below the lunar surface, where it reflects signals toward Jupiter's moons.
He's almost a man, as he told Jon back in the season premiere, but he's mostly a tool of convenience designed to relay narrative information we couldn't get otherwise — whether it's scouting the White Walkers, revealing "Thrones" prehistory or dropping knowledge bombs.
James C. Scott's "Against the Grain," but that's just one of several recent books by Scott drawing on the radical new understanding regarding agriculture and a prehistory in which wild plant use and management was far more subtle (and productive) than realized before.
Dr. Zilhão joined with archaeologists Alistair G.W. Pike of the University of Southampton and Dirk L. Hoffmann, now at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, to see if the prehistory of European art could be brought into sharper focus.
Though we stand by the logic of marking the beginning of American slavery with the year it was introduced in the English colonies, this feedback has helped us think about the importance of considering the prehistory of the period our project addresses.
He goes from prehistory — 55-million-year-old fossilized jaws of tiny early horses — through the horse's place in the history of the Old West, to the present day, with cowboys celebrating a roundup's end with a round of strawberry daiquiris at a bar.
"Looking at it from a prevention standpoint, it's concerning when a young person already has a prehistory or an existing mental health problem with anxiety, depression, and, for a smaller group, actually psychotic illnesses," Schwartz said, adding that such illnesses are risk factors for suicidal behavior.
Archaeologists who specialize in Italy's prehistory often grumble that, when wonders like the Pantheon and the Colosseum are a constant reminder of what was to come, it can be hard to stir up excitement about chipped spearheads or undecorated clay pots, even if they date back millenniums.
Trees have been used to build structures since prehistory, but especially after disasters like the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, wood came to be seen as unsafe and unstable relative to the two materials that have since become staples of the construction industry worldwide: concrete and steel.
As the eight core characters slowly start to realize that the world is filled with other clusters — and has been since prehistory — that world becomes both much larger and much scarier, especially once they realize what some sensates have done in order to keep themselves or their clusters alive.
"  Last year, the Minneapolis Institute of Art hosted a roundtable for Native women artists and scholars to "meet and plan for the first comprehensive exhibition exclusively devoted to Native women artists from prehistory to the present, in all media, and from the entire United States and parts of Canada.
The exhibitions in the United States were developed with the support of Germany's Foreign Office and in partnership with four German institutions: the State Museum of Prehistory in Halle; the Luther Memorials Foundation of Saxony-Anhalt; the German Historical Museum in Berlin; and the Foundation Schloss Friedenstein in Gotha.
That's in part because of its roots in a neoconservative wing of the party, many of whose members openly loathe the president, and partly because the Beacon played a role in the prehistory of the legendary Steele dossier, initially hiring the research firm Fusion GPS to research Trump.
"Livro da Criação" ("Book of Creation"), from 28-21975, comprises 21997 square boards that translate prehistory into pure form: Red and white triangles suggest the discovery of fire, a folding fan stands for the invention of the wheel, and a rotating red disk symbolizes the invention of timekeeping.
"The stunning combat scene on the seal stone, one of the greatest masterpieces of Aegean art, bears comparison with some of the drawings in the Michelangelo show now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art," said Malcolm H. Wiener, an expert on Aegean prehistory and a trustee emeritus of the Met.
In her work in the field, Garrod is credited with shifting the Eurocentric view of archaeology toward the Middle East, pioneering a new understanding of prehistory and relationships between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens, and bringing a new scientific focus to a field that was still in the infancy of wide academic acceptance.
Prehistory: Storing sushi in the early days of fermentation About the time our hunter-gatherer ancestors took up farming, 11,000 years ago, they started to consume probiotics without even realizing it, said Dr. Cate Shanahan, a Newtown, Connecticut-based family physician who also consults as a nutritionist with the Los Angeles Lakers.
To get there, you take the escalator by the Passage Richelieu entrance under the pyramid, turn right and enter the Near Eastern Antiquities section, an unwieldy collection that spans 9,000 years, from prehistory to the early Islamic period, and covers an area from North Africa to Central Asia and the Arabian Peninsula.
Its collections date from prehistory to the Middle Ages and include several hundred locally discovered Bronze-Age objects such as leggings decorated with etched geometric motifs; household items, jewelry and weapons from the ancient Celts; a Gallo-Roman frieze representing the mother-goddesses of Alesia; and Merovingian sarcophagi from the fifth and sixth centuries.
In his book, Bone Rooms: From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums, he proposes that a large portion of these bones were accumulated towards the end of the 19th century, when remains were seen not only as fascinating displays for the curious public, but valuable databases that could provide evidence for the emergent field of race science.
I raise all this marital prehistory not to excuse the elements of the original "Kiss Me, Kate" that rankle our sensibilities today — its gender stereotypes and wife-slapping argument for womanly submission — but to suggest how the latest Broadway revival, which opened on Thursday in a production starring the sublime Kelli O'Hara, could be so enjoyable anyway.
But still: our semi-sane quest to recover Sonia's work had not only returned us to an important place in the prehistory of our friendship but had brought us into contact with my work, a strange synchronicity that suddenly lent the building a sinister feel, as if we'd been entrapped by a person we believed we'd been pursuing.

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