Showing 341 - 360 results of 497 for search '"death"', query time: 0.06s Refine Results
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    EL DIMORFISMO SEXUAL EN GUANACOS (LAMA GUANICOE). UNA EVALUACIÓN OSTEOMÉTRICA DE ELEMENTOS POSCRANEALES / Sexual dimorphism in guanacos (Lama guanicoe). An osteometric evaluation o... by Kaufmann, Cristian Ariel; INCUAPA-FSC-UNCPBA, L´Heureux, Gabriela Lorena; CONICET

    Published 2009
    “…The sample was composed by 32 individuals (8 males and 24 females) older than 30 month at the age of death. Fifty one hemipelvis, 40 humeri, 39 radioulnae, 40 femora, and 41 tibiae were measured. …”
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    info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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    Primitive Man : Quarterly Bulletin of the Catholic Anthropological Conference /

    Published 1944
    Table of Contents: “…Property Concepts of the Lac-St-Jean Montagnais / J. Allan Burgesse -- Death Rites among the Waluguru and Wanguru / Thomas McVicar -- Some Recent Anthropological Publications / John M. …”
    Serial
  15. 355

    Arstryck /

    Published 1963
    Table of Contents: “…Observaions on life cycle rituals among the Makuna: birth, initiatio, death / Kaj Arhem.…”
    Serial
  16. 356

    Sedación agónica en niños: ¿es moralmente ética? / by Lazzuri, Oscar Emilio

    Published 2016
    On-LINE
    Thesis Book
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    Raw materials and mobility circuits in northeastern Patagonia. An approach to the study of social conflicts from archaeological evidences. by Berón, Mónica Alejandra, Carrera Aizpitarte, Manuel Pedro

    Published 2019
    “…In this sense, one of the projectiles, whose macroscopic characteristics are far from the Pampean sources identified, caused the death of an individual, whose mode of burial, isotopic values and trousseau elements indicate an Andean origin. …”
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  19. 359

    Toponymy of the Wichi of Northwest Formosa, Argentina by Flamini, Marco

    Published 2020
    “…The studied toponyms evoke narratives that describe a dynamic natural and social environment, inhabited by a multiplicity of beings (human and non-human, physical and metaphysical) intimately linked in a constant cycle of life and death, degeneration and renewal. The Wichi toponymic map is far more than a cartographic representation of the landscape, it addresses many significant topics for the Wichi and holds testimonies of the multidimensional human experience within the territory.…”
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