phone Pomoc-kontakt

AP Historical Hard Drive 2

EN_00949304_3310
AP Historical Hard Drive 2
Paleontologist Ted Daeschler holds a 365-million-year-old fossil of an arm bone with characteristics of both fish and tetrapod (limbed animal) in his office at The Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia Wednesday, March 31, 2004. Jennifer A. Clack, a researcher at the University of Cambridge in England, said the discovery by researcher Neil Shubin and co-author Daeschler suggests the humerus bone could have come from a previously unknown tetrapod that needed its limbs to bear weight, as required when living on land.(AP Photo/Jacqueline Larma)
Minimum price 50PLN
2004-03-31
ASSOCIATED PRESS/East News
Associated Press
JACQUELINE LARMA
768513
0,43MB
13cm x 17cm przy 300dpi
2004, 31, A, ACADEMY, AN, AND, ANIMAL, ARM, AS, AT, BEAR, BONE, BOTH, BY, CAMBRIDGE, CHARACTERISTICS, CLACK, CO-AUTHOR, COME, COULD, DAESCHLER, DISCOVERY, ENGLAND, FISH, FOSSIL, FROM, HAVE, HIS, HOLDS, HUMERUS, IN, ITS, JACQUELINE, JENNIFER, LAND, LARMA, LIMBED, LIMBS, LIVING, MARCH, NATURAL, NEEDED, NEIL, OF, OFFICE, ON, PALEONTOLOGIST, PHILADELPHIA, PREVIOUSLY, REQUIRED, RESEARCHER, SAID, SCIENCES, SHUBIN, SUGGESTS, TED, TETRAPOD, THAT, THE, TO, UNIVERSITY, UNKNOWN, WEDNESDAY, WEIGHT, WHEN, WITH,