 |
 |
Teaching materials:
Teaching materials database
Found 15 resources for the concept: Anatomical similarities of living things reflect common ancestry
Lines of evidence: The science of evolution The theory of evolution is broadly accepted by scientists — and for good reason! Learn about the diverse and numerous lines of evidence that support the theory of evolution.
|
|
What did T. Rex Taste Like? In this web-based module students are introduced to cladistics, which organizes living things by common ancestry and evolutionary relationships.
|
|
A Strange Fish Indeed: The “Discovery” of a Living Fossil Through a series of fictionalized diary entries, this case recounts the 1939 discovery by Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer (and identification by J.L.B. Smith) of a living coelacanth, a fish believed to have been extinct for 70 million years.
|
|
An antipodal mystery The discovery of the platypus had the scientific world in an uproar with its mammal-like and bird-like features. How was one to classify the platypus? This case study uses this issue to model the scientific process, with scientists arguing, debating, collecting more evidence, and revising their opinions as new data become available.
|
|
Hominid Cranium Comparison (The "Skulls" Lab) Students describe, measure and compare cranial casts from contemporary apes, modern humans, and fossil hominids to discover some of the similarities and differences between these forms and to see the pattern leading to modern humans.
|
|
Classification and Evolution Students construct an evolutionary tree of imaginary animals (Caminalcules) to illustrate how modern classification schemes attempt to reflect evolutionary history.
|
|
The genes that lie beneath: The work of Leslea Hlusko Evolutionary biologist Leslea Hlusko’s research takes her from the deserts of Ethiopia, where she hunts for hominid and primate fossils, to a baboon colony in San Antonio where she takes thousands of measurements of the primates' imposing canines. This research profile describes how the two projects are linked by a hunt for genetic variation, a key component of natural selection.
|
|
Bringing homologies into focus There's more to homologies and analogies than the iconic examples (e.g., the tetrapod limb) found in every high school textbook. This article goes beyond the basics to explore the many evolutionary scenarios that result in homoplasies and the many levels at which homologies might occur. This article appears at SpringerLink.
|
|
Webcast: Fossils, genes, and embryos In lecture three of a four part series, evolutionary biologist David Kingsley examines the original objections to Darwin's theory and shows how modern evidence supports the theory. This lecture is available from Howard Hughes' BioInteractive website.
|
|
| |
 |
 |

|