The newest edition of Evolution: Education and Outreach is now online:
Mick Wycoff
PDF (53.8 KB)
HTML
Articles:
How Can English Tell the Story?
Douglas Reed Eldredge
PDF (70.4 KB)
HTML
Becoming Modern Homo sapiens
PDF (109.3 KB)
HTML
The Evolution of Morality
PDF (202.8 KB)
HTML
The Argument from Design: A Guided Tour of William Paley’s Natural Theology (1802)
PDF (175.7 KB)
HTML
PDF (134.9 KB)
HTML
PDF (238.7 KB)
HTML
PDF (135.2 KB)
HTML
PDF (148.7 KB)
HTML
Texas Biology and Biological Anthropology Faculty Express Their Views on Teaching Evolution
PDF (158.1 KB)
HTML
Lessons from EEO: Toward a Universal Evolutionary Curriculum
PDF (184.7 KB)
HTML
Acceptance of Evolution Increases with Student Academic Level: A Comparison Between a Secular and a Religious College
PDF (557.6 KB)
HTML
Why “Sudden Appearance” Is Not as It Appears
PDF (77.5 KB)
HTML
PDF (300.6 KB)
HTML
PDF (468.3 KB)
HTML
PDF (100.9 KB)
HTML
Print Reference Sources about Evolution
PDF (201.4 KB)
HTML
Tracing the ELF: Joyful Excursions in Search of Evolution
PDF (156.4 KB)
HTML
Fearfully and Wonderfully Made: An Evo-Devo Perspective on Human Anatomy
Quirks of Human Anatomy: An Evo-Devo Look at the Human Body, by Louis I. Held, Jr. Cambridge University Press: New York, Pp. Xii + 260, P/b $34.99
Evolution: The First Four Billion Years, Edited by Michael Ruse and Joseph Travis with a foreword by Edward O. Wilson. Cambridge, MA and London, UK: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2009. Pp. Xii + 979. H/b $39.95
PDF (58.0 KB)
HTML
Why Evolution Is True, by Jerry A. Coyne. New York: Viking, 2009. Pp. xx + 282. H/b $27.95
PDF (59.8 KB)
HTML
Darwin’s Universe: Evolution from A to Z, by Richard Milner. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009, Pp. 487, H/b $39.95.
PDF (128.9 KB)
HTML
Go online to see the complete issue of Evolution: Education and Outreach Volume 2, Number 4 / December, 2009 at SpringerLink
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted on December 3, 2009 at 10:41 PM in Anthropology, Education, Evolution, homology, morality, teaching | RSS feed