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147 results on '"Haplorhini classification"'

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1. An Early Oligocene age for the oldest known monkeys and rodents of South America.

2. A new parapithecine (Primates: Anthropoidea) from the early Oligocene of Libya supports parallel evolution of large body size among parapithecids.

3. A new identification of the monkeys depicted in a Bronze Age wall painting from Akrotiri, Thera.

4. Cranial endocast of a stem platyrrhine primate and ancestral brain conditions in anthropoids.

5. Middle ear pneumatization in nonhuman primates: A comparative analysis.

6. New middle Eocene omomyines (Primates, Haplorhini) from San Diego County, California.

7. The role of indirect evidence and traditional ecological knowledge in the discovery and description of new ape and monkey species since 1980.

8. Nasolacrimal anatomy and haplorhine origins.

9. New euprimate postcrania from the early Eocene of Gujarat, India, and the strepsirrhine-haplorhine divergence.

10. Sexual selection on male vocal fundamental frequency in humans and other anthropoids.

11. Upper molar morphology of the early oligocene egyptian anthropoid Qatrania wingi.

12. A new species of Apidium (Anthropoidea, Parapithecidae) from the Sirt Basin, central Libya: First record of Oligocene primates from Libya.

13. A morphological intermediate between eosimiiform and simiiform primates from the late middle Eocene of Tunisia: Macroevolutionary and paleobiogeographic implications of early anthropoids.

14. Seven novel MHC class I alleles identified in Cercopithecus mitis.

15. Performance of genomic data sets on the estimation of the divergence time of New World and Old World anthropoids.

16. Evolution of the relaxin/insulin-like gene family in anthropoid primates.

17. A new Late Eocene primate from the Krabi Basin (Thailand) and the diversity of Palaeogene anthropoids in southeast Asia.

18. Uniquely derived upper molar morphology of Eocene Amphipithecidae (Primates: Anthropoidea): homology and phylogeny.

19. Identification of bacterial infection in neotropical primates.

20. Laterality and the evolution of the prefronto-cerebellar system in anthropoids.

21. Man and monkey.

22. Microcephaly genes and the evolution of sexual dimorphism in primate brain size.

23. Retrophylogenomics place tarsiers on the evolutionary branch of anthropoids.

24. Comparative analysis of encephalization in mammals reveals relaxed constraints on anthropoid primate and cetacean brain scaling.

25. New Apterodontinae (Hyaenodontida) from the Eocene locality of Dur At-Talah (Libya): systematic, paleoecological and phylogenetical implications.

26. Cross-taxa similarities in affect-induced changes of vocal behavior and voice in arboreal monkeys.

27. New fossils of the oldest North American euprimate Teilhardina brandti (Omomyidae) from the paleocene-eocene thermal maximum.

28. Reemergence of yellow fever: detection of transmission in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, 2008.

29. Evaluation of Bayesian models of substitution rate evolution--parental guidance versus mutual independence.

30. Darwinius masillae is a strepsirrhine--a reply to Franzen et al. (2009).

31. Frontal white matter volume is associated with brain enlargement and higher structural connectivity in anthropoid primates.

32. Anthropoid versus strepsirhine status of the African Eocene primates Algeripithecus and Azibius: craniodental evidence.

33. The phylogenetic significance of anthropoid paranasal sinuses.

34. Frontal fusion: collapse of another anthropoid synapomorphy.

35. Morphology of the enamel-dentine junction in sections of anthropoid primate maxillary molars.

36. Phylogeography and population structure of the Yunnan snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus bieti) inferred from mitochondrial control region DNA sequence analysis.

38. Paleontology. Shaking the earliest branches of anthropoid primate evolution.

39. Basal anthropoids from Egypt and the antiquity of Africa's higher primate radiation.

40. Anthropoid primates from the Oligocene of Pakistan (Bugti Hills): data on early anthropoid evolution and biogeography.

41. Deep time and the search for anthropoid origins.

42. Ancestral population sizes and species divergence times in the primate lineage on the basis of intron and BAC end sequences.

43. Structure and function of CC-chemokine receptor 5 homologues derived from representative primate species and subspecies of the taxonomic suborders Prosimii and Anthropoidea.

44. Contribution of homoplasy and of ancestral polymorphism to the evolution of genes in anthropoid primates.

45. Taxonomic variation in the patterns of craniofacial dimorphism in primates.

46. Telomere biology and cellular aging in nonhuman primate cells.

47. Genetic analyses of the promoter region of interleukin-10 gene in different species of monkeys: implications for HIV/AIDS progression.

48. Earliest record of a parapithecid anthropoid from the Jebel Qatrani formation, Northern Egypt.

49. Phylogeny of Pneumocystis carinii from 18 primate species confirms host specificity and suggests coevolution.

50. A new anthropoid from the latest middle Eocene of Pondaung, central Myanmar.

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