Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: Guinea

Black Death Mortality not as Widespread as Long Thought

https://www.mpg.de/18236353/0210-wisy-black-death-mortality-not-as-widespread-as-long-thought-9347732-x

A new study uses pollen data to evaluate the second plague pandemic’s mortality at a regional scale across Europe. Results show that the impacts of the Black Death varied substantially from region to region and demonstrate the importance of cross-disciplinary approaches for understanding past – and present – pandemics.
significance of regional dispersals and local interactions in coastal Papua New Guinea

First Human Culture Lasted 20,000 Years Longer Than Thought

https://www.mpg.de/16237767/pr-scerry-joung-middle-stone-age-0111-wisy-9347732-x

Homo sapiens emerged in Africa around 300,000 years ago, where their fossils are found with the earliest cultural and technological expressions of our species. This repertoire, commonly referred to as the “Middle Stone Age”, remained widely in use across much of Africa until around 60,000 to 30,000 years ago. New research in Senegal shows this ‚first human culture‘ persisted until 11,000 years ago – 20,000 years longer than previously thought.
significance of regional dispersals and local interactions in coastal Papua New Guinea

„Glokalisierungen“ von Normativität

https://www.mpg.de/14923911/rg_jb_2019?c=150130

Den existenziellen Herausforderungen der Welt – Klimakrise, Migration, Pandemien – ist nur durch globale Koordination zu begegnen. Können wir uns aber auf globale Regeln verständigen? – Der Blick in die Geschichte zeigt, dass wir auf einen Grundbestand einer internationalen Sprache des Rechts zurückgreifen.
Jahrhundert, dem lusophonen Südatlantik, insbesondere Angola, Kap Verde, Guinea-Bissau

Japan Prize 2020 goes to Svante Pääbo

https://www.mpg.de/14440420/paeaebo-japan-prize-2020

Svante Pääbo, Director at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, is the founder of palaeogenetics, a research discipline concerned with the analysis of genetic samples from fossils and prehistoric finds. Which of the genetic changes that occurred in the course of evolutionary history make up modern man is what Pääbo studies by comparing the DNA sequences of modern-day humans, Neanderthals and other human ancestors. His groundbreaking research has now earned him Japan Prize, which is endowed with mit 50 million Yen (approx. 490,000 euros).
) showed that Denisovans handed down DNA to populations currently living in New Guinea