Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Dr. Dart had not set out to be a paleoanthropologist.
Dr. Walker is a paleoanthropologist who works on primate and human evolution.
He seemed altogether fascinated by the paleoanthropologist.
He is a Belgian archaeologist and paleoanthropologist whose main field of study has been the Palaeolithic period.
He was the father of the Georgian paleoanthropologist David Lordkipanidze.
Donald Johanson is a paleoanthropologist best known for his 1974 discovery of the fossil Lucy.
Miss Fellowes was taken aback by his elegance and daintiness: that wasn't at all how she had expected a paleoanthropologist to look.
The paleoanthropologist stood up, looking abashed.
Peter S. Ungar (born 1963) is an American paleoanthropologist and evolutionary biologist.
Lucinda Backwell, paleoanthropologist best known for her discovery of termite digging behaviour in early hominids.
It has been described by the Dutch paleoanthropologist Eugène Dubois in 1908.
Bernhard Zipfel, paleoanthropologist and curator of collections.
Donald Johanson, paleoanthropologist, discovered the 3.2 million-year-old skeleton known as "Lucy"
Plesiopithecus teras was first described in 1992 by paleoanthropologist Elwyn Simons.
Dr. Rogers, a paleoanthropologist, came upon the most revealing site three years ago while searching the arid hills for fossils or artifacts.
Dr. Wood, a paleoanthropologist, also noted how rare it was for the fragile bones of infants to survive long enough to fossilize.
Lee Berger, Paleoanthropologist and discoverer of the Gladysvale site.
Ronald J. Clarke, paleoanthropologist most notable for the discovery of "Little Foot"
This led to the published in 1995 by Ciochon and Chinese paleoanthropologist of the findings in the journal Nature.
Fiorenzo Facchini, an Italian priest and paleoanthropologist.
Richard Klein (paleoanthropologist)
The following year, paleoanthropologist Philip D. Gingerich reclassified it as an adapid.
Frederick E. Grine is an American paleoanthropologist.
During the 1970s, paleoanthropologist Bill Montagne was working in Olduvai Gorge and became injured.
"I think these results are monumental," said Richard G. Klein, a paleoanthropologist at Stanford University who was not involved in the studies.