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Posts Tagged ‘evolution’

Human evolution: The old man of the mountain returns

More evidence for a previously unknown species of human

SVANTE PAABO, the DNA palaeontologist whose work provided the inspiration for “Jurassic Park”, has produced a nice Christmas present for students of human evolution. He and his colleagues have confirmed, using the creature’s whole genome, that a fossil finger bone which is at least 30,000 years old, and which was found in a cave in the Altai mountains of Siberia, comes from a previously unknown human species. That was all but certain from their previous study of the creature’s mitochondrial DNA (an abundant form of the molecule found in cells’ powerpacks), released in March. The latest analysis, published in Nature on December 23rd, removes any doubt—and adds a tooth to the meagre stock of evidence from the new species that modern science is able to examine.

This discovery is extraordinary on many levels. Perhaps the most important is that one small group of modern humans who live far away from Siberia—the Melanesian islanders of the Pacific Ocean—have picked up a block of genes from the newly discovered species on their (or, rather, their ancestors’) travels. Genetic evidence of the Melanesians’ journey from the African cradle of Homo sapiens, which started (like that of all non-African people) about 60,000 years ago when a band of adventurers crossed the straits of Bab el Mandeb, from modern Djibouti to modern Yemen, suggests they then continued along the south coast of Asia, never going far inland. For the necessary interbreeding to have happened, Dr Paabo’s new species would thus have to have been spread over a vast area of Asia. Yet it has left no previously identified traces. …

The Visibility Evolution and Its Numerous Rewards Posted By : Adeline Hale

Systems and departments should always go hand in hand. Know that incompatibility of the two, when left unaddressed eventually cause dysfunction even within the most established company or organization.

Science, Freebies, Internet Marketing, The Evolution Of Leslie The Freebie Guy

Here I am, blogging away on Entrepreneurs Journey – A blog that many of you have grown fond of because of Yaro, yet many of you don’t really know who I am. Please allow me to let you in on my journey and fill in the background as to how I ended up here. So [...]

Evolution of TV Mobile Phones Posted By : Paddy Chang

Live Internet TV | Online TV technology allows you to watch over 4,500 HD channels right on your PC.

Evolution and coat colour: Well spotted

The reason why some cats are plain and others are patterned

HOW the leopard got his spots is, famously, the subject of one of Rudyard Kipling’s “Just So Stories”. Kipling suggested they were handprints made by the leopard’s human friend. More plausibly, he had an explanation for what the spots are for: to break up the animal’s shape when it is hiding in the dappled light of the forest.

These days, the human-handprint theory of the leopard’s spots has fallen out of favour. Instead, a more prosaic idea has gained ground, based on what is known as reaction-diffusion pattern formation, in which chemicals that trigger the differentiation of cells in an embryo interact with one another to produce patterns that are then reflected in the fates of nearby cells. But that, too, has its difficulties. Just how much a process like this can be shaped by natural selection is unclear. …

Sept. 10, 1941: Stephen Jay Gould Born

1941: Stephen Jay Gould, who will become a famous evolutionary theorist and popular science writer, is born in New York City.
As a 5-year-old, Gould became fascinated by paleontology during a visit to the American Museum of Natural History with his father. “I dreamed of becoming a scientist, in general, and a paleontologist, in particular, ever [...]

The Evolution of Internet Television Posted By : Paddy Chang

Live Internet TV | Online TV technology allows you to watch over 4,500 HD channels right on your PC.

Earthdance: Evolution of a Legacy

By: Xochi Raye

The 14th Annual Earthdance Festival will take place September 17-19 at Black Oak Ranch for the very last time. You can check out more details on this gathering here, which includes headliners Spearhead, Matisyahu, Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave, EOTO and many more.

Every September for the past eight years, the Earthdance Peace Festival in Laytonville CA has drawn folks by the thousands to the legendary Black Oak Ranch for a weekend of celebration, music, dance, art and participation with an international prayer for peace and healing. Earthdance Laytonville is the hub event of the global Earthdance peace festival, which unites over 350 locations in 65 countries each year. Often described as a festival that combines the artistic liberation of Burning Man with the socially responsible conscience of the Oregon Country Fair, the festival has gained international recognition as one of the best “boutique” festivals on the west coast of the USA, with sell out shows each year. The festival has now outgrown itself and will be moving to a new location for 2012.

Prayer For Peace – Earthdance ’09 by Michael Buchanan

“To me it feels like a really positive change,” says Earthdance founder Chris Deckker. “If we can embrace change and transition, there is a lot of room for powerful growth.”

Earthdance began as a one-day international event in 1997, using the universal medium of music and dance to unite people across the world in support of global peace and sustainability. The climax of the global event is a synchronized prayer for peace that is played by every location at the same time. The event has grown from 18 locations in 1997 to over 350 locations in 65 countries.

The first California Earthdance Festival took place in 2001 on the Yakeama Native American Reservation near Santa Rosa. In 2003, Earthdance found its home at the Black Oak Ranch, and at the same time, Deckker partnered with Bob Barsotti, one of Bill Graham’s production managers who was pivotal in producing The Grateful Dead touring phenomena. The ranch is also home to the legendary “Hog Farm” community, who began their legacy in the 60s, founded by Wavy Gravy, the infamous clown activist. The Hog Farm is considered to be one of America’s longest running counterculture communities, and is best known for their involvement with the Woodstock Music Festival. Earthdance Laytonville became a wonderful merging of 60s counterculture energy with the evolving technology generation.

So, it was inevitable that this land, coupled with the intentional container that Earthdance creates, would foster a certain magic of its own kind. From devotional Sufis chanting in the middle of the night to internationally renowned DJs and major headline acts, Earthdance Laytonville offers something for all. Past highlights include the “Drums for Peace” in 2005. That year Earthdance broke the Guinness World Record for the largest drum circle, giving away thousands of drums to those who registered for the event. Mickey Hart and some of the world’s best percussionists facilitated a prayer that literally shook the wings of an airplane overhead. The pilot flying the plane was filming the drum circle, and commented that with every beat he could feel his wings vibrating. The only other time that a pilot has recorded his wings shaking was when bombs were being dropped.

Earthdance ’09 by Michael Buchanan

The largest ever Celtic Spiral Dance was led in 2006 by Suzanne Sterling of Reclaiming, a Pagan Roots organization out of San Francisco, and in 2007 the international prayer included a global Om Circle with the intention of healing of our planetary waters. Earthdance was also the first West Coast festival to present an “elders wisdom council” featuring first nation and counterculture elders from across the world. This year the international prayer will be facilitated by Grandmother Agnes, Baker Pilgrim of the 13 Indigenous Grandmothers Council, and Chief Oren Lyons of the Onondaga Nation with the theme being “Honoring Our Traditions.”

Workshops offered throughout the weekend include yoga, permaculture, ancient forms of dance and healing and Earthskills workshops, where teaching of traditional indigenous skills such as cord weaving, hide tanning and natural fire making will be shared.

To make this a “grand farewell” year to remember the festival will present an amazing line up of artists featuring, Michael Franti and Spearhead, Matisyahu, Zap Mama, Ivan Neville’s Dumstaphunk, The Yard Dogs Road Show, Kinky and many others. The festival will feature five stages of entertainment representing all music genres including a dedicated electronica stage and all-night devotional music.

“It will be bittersweet to say goodbye to the Black Oak Ranch,” reflects Deckker ” It has been wonderful to have such a stunning and vibrant place as a home for the past eight years. So much magic happened there! This is truly the end of a legacy, but I am really excited for these changes, and to see what the next chapter for Earthdance will bring.”

JamBase | Worldwide
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Apple Newton, Compaq, Early IBM ThinkPads Launched Tablet Evolution

The early success of the Apple iPad and the fevered media coverage of potential competing devices from Dell, Hewlett-Packard and others might give the impression that the tablet concept is something new in the personal computer industry. But the fact is that PC manufacturers and software developers have been experimenting with the tablet format since the late 1980s. This eWEEK slide show illustrates the evolution of the tablet PC over the past 20 years. – …


Evolution Studios to Unveil MotorStorm Apocalypse

MotorStorm Apocalypse is a racing game that was officially announced by Evolution Studios. The news can be found on the official blog of Sony PlayStation. This new MotorStorm Apocalypse will be available for PlayStation 3. It is expected to happen next year. Actually, the game takes place in apocalyptic environments.
Every race of the game is [...]

Diet and the evolution of the brain: Fish and no chips

The wonders of docosahexaenoic acid

TO PIN one big evolutionary shift on a particular molecule is ambitious. To pin two on it is truly audacious. Yet doing so was just one of the ideas floating around at “A Celebration of DHA” in London this week. The celebration in question was a scientific meeting, rather than a festival. It was definitely, however, a love-in. It was held on May 26th and 27th at the Royal Society of Medicine to discuss the many virtues of docosahexaenoic acid, the most important of that fashionable class of dietary chemicals, the omega-3 fatty acids.

DHA is a component of brains, particularly the synaptic junctions between nerve cells, and its displacement from modern diets by the omega-6 acids in cooking oils such as soya, maize and rape is a cause of worry. Many researchers think this shift—and the change in brain chemistry that it causes—explains the growth in recent times of depression, manic-depression, memory loss, schizophrenia and attention-deficit disorder. It may also be responsible for rising levels of obesity and thus the heart disease which often accompanies being overweight. …

Masculine traits: To get the girl

Fighting off rivals may be responsible for masculine traits

WHEN two drunken men fight over a woman, alcohol and stupidity may not be the only things at work. Sadly, evolution may have shaped men to behave this way. Almost all of the traits considered to be masculine—big muscles, facial hair, square jaws, deep voices and a propensity to violence—evolved, it now seems, specifically for their usefulness in fighting off or intimidating other men, allowing the winner to get the girl.

That, at least, is the contention of David Puts, an anthropologist at Pennsylvania State University, in an upcoming paper in Evolution and Human Behavior. Dr Puts is looking at how sexual selection gave rise to certain human traits. A trait is sexually selected if it evolved specifically to enhance mating success. They come in two main forms: weapons, such as an elk’s horns are used to fight off competitors; and ornaments, like a peacock’s tail, which are used to advertise genetic fitness to attract the opposite sex. …

ERP Evolution Posted By : erppandit

ERP is an outcome of 40 years of trial and error. It has evolved as a strategic tool because of continuous improvement in the available techniques to manage business and the fast growth of information technology.

Nov. 24, 1974: Humanity, Meet Lucy. She’s Your Mom

1974: Paleonanthropologist Don Johanson and graduate student Tom Gray discover the skeleton of Lucy, the first recognizably human member of the primate family tree.
One morning toward the end of his second field season in Hadar, Ethiopia, Johanson decided to put his paperwork away and go bone-hunting with Gray. After several fruitless hours, they stopped [...]

The evolution of flying reptiles: A patchwork quilt

How new groups of creatures emerge

EVOLUTION is not always a process of gradual change. Shifts in entire body shapes, leading to the foundation of whole new groups of animals or plants, sometimes take place. These involve the near-simultaneous alteration of many body parts and it is rare for the fossil record to catch such palaeolycanthropes in mid-shape-shift, as it were. Lu Junchang of the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences in Beijing and his colleagues, however, think that they may have done so in the case of a newly discovered flying reptile called Darwinopterus modularis.

As they report in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, the 160m-year-old Darwinopterus, which has been dug up in Liaoning Province, catches the flying reptiles in transition between the primitive, long-tailed forms exemplified by Rhamphorhynchus and the advanced, almost tailless creatures typified by Pteranodon. This confirms what has been observed in two other transitional fossils, Archaeopteryx (the oldest known bird) and Rodhocetus (a proto-whale). Both of these fossils suggest such transitions are not smooth, simultaneous transformations of all bodily features from old to new. Instead, some features shift to the advanced form at the beginning of the process, while others stay resolutely primitive until near the end. …

Kirk Cameron Evolution Debate

That Mike Seaver’s always horsing around! Former Growing Pains star Kirk Cameron is causing controversy with his recent remarks on evolution. The teen heartthrob-turned-born-again-Christian helped create a special edition of The Origin of Species “”with a 50-page introduction that picks apart Charles Darwin’s theory on evolution by linking it to everything from Nazism to eugenics.

On [...]

Apple’s iPod Evolution Could Mark End of Dedicated Devices

Apple’s Sept. 9 rollout of an iPod Nano equipped with a video camera and a larger screen suggests a larger trend of manufacturers concentrating on multifunctional devices, including tablet PCs. If those devices find a foothold in the enterprise and consumer markets, there is a likelihood that dedicated devices such as e-readers and MP3 players could find themselves endangered species against gadgets that not only display text or play music, but also capture video and allow document editing.
– When did you last purchase a device that performed just one primary
function?
Purchasers of Amazon’s Kindle line, a Flip digital video recorder, an
e-reader or a digital music player manufactured by a company such as Sony could
probably answer quot;yesterday. quot; But as Apple’s
Sept. 9 even…


Tortoise: 20 Years of Evolution

By: Ron Hart

Tortoise

It’s been five years since Chicago’s intrepid instrumentalists Tortoise released new material, but that hasn’t slowed fan appreciation or band reflection. Following 2004′s It’s All Around You, Tortoise released The Brave and the Bold where they backed Bonnie “Prince” Billy on a series of totally inventive covers, as well as their career-spanning 2006 rarities box set, A Lazarus Taxon. The band has also kept busy on the road, recently performing the 1996 masterpiece Millions Now Living Will Never Die on the festival circuit. So, when it came time to record a brand new album, the band that created its own experimental post-rock sub-genre did what pioneers do, they reinvented themselves.

Seemingly inspired by such modern-day beat maestros as Prefuse 73 and the late J Dilla, Beacons of Ancestorship (released June 23 on Thrill Jockey, JamBase album review here) incorporates an alien, urban groove that more recalls the Bumps project Tortoise members Dan Bitney, John McEntire and John Herndon released on Stones Throw in 2007 than the group’s regular vibraphone-heavy polymath, especially on tracks like “Penumbra” and “Minors.” A more educated ear can even catch glimmers of the soundtrack work of John Carpenter on “De Chelly” and some classic David Axelrod on “The Fall of Seven Diamonds Plus One.” Some fans might be taken aback initially by the sheer density of the songs here, particularly the fuzzy, freaky “Yinxianghechengqi.” However, once you peel back the layers you will discover Tortoise’s finest work since TNT (1998).


The following interview took place with guitarist Jeff Parker and percussionist/band founder John McEntire, where we covered a great deal of ground as it pertains to the release of Beacons of Ancestorship and where it fits within the dichotomy of this most ingenious and unique American rock outfit on the eve of its 20th anniversary.

JamBase: I just wanted to confirm with you guys, in listening to this album I get a sense you guys have spent a lot of time listening to J. Dilla and funky Lalo Schifrin soundtracks. Am I correct in my assumption?

Jeff Parker: We’re really happy with it. I’m glad you dig it, too. Yes, you are correct in your assumption. We listened to a lot of Axelrod, too. Dan Bitney, John Herndon and myself are obsessed with Dilla, have been for about a decade, it seems.

John McEntire: I think to a certain degree, but we tried to keep it in check a little bit, ya know? We don’t like to see any of the things that float around in our heads to show up in what we do too obviously. But, even having said that, I think that one tune, “Penumbra,” is a pretty obvious nod to J. Dilla.


JamBase: How did you guys initially get into David Axelrod and what albums do you count as your favorites?

Tortoise

Parker: I only discovered Axelrod’s music about six years ago when John [McEntire] played Songs of Experience for me. I felt like I had been waiting my entire life for that music; it was so stunning, conceptually advanced, etc. Of course, I was familiar with it secondhand through sampling [by DJ Shadow, Dr. Dre, Madlib, etc.]. We never tried to imitate Axe’s music though. There’s a little bit of the vibe of Axe on “Stretch (You Are Alright)” from IAAY [It's All Around You].

McEntire: We kind of discovered Axelrod back when everybody else did, like seven or eight years ago? [Axelrod] definitely stuck with us, ’cause [his music] is really inspiring stuff.

Parker: As far as [favorite] albums go, Earth Rot [1970], Songs of Experience [1969] and Songs of Innocence [1968]. The comp that was released a couple years back is great. It’s a collection of stuff from his years at Capitol called The Edge. Personally, I love the records he produced for The Electric Prunes, and a lot of those Cannonball Adderley albums, too. I often use tracks from Soul Zodiac when I make birthday mix tapes for people!

In terms of hip-hop, who else besides Dilla has influenced you guys and the direction of Beacons and why?

Parker: A lot of us are huge hip-hop fans – some of us aren’t such big fans, though. So much of the hip-hop aesthetic of making music has been very influential in Tortoise, from the very beginning [check Bundy K. Brown's remix on "Rhythms, Resolutions and Clusters" from '95 where he sampled A Tribe Called Quest and Minnie Riperton]. The concept of building music from the rhythm section up, chopping up breaks, loops, music that’s dynamically stagnant, is all informed from hip-hop, but also a lot of other things, too. Hip-hop music is all about the manipulation of the recorded medium, and that’s something that we are all very interested in. Just listen to the GZA’s Liquid Swords.

Beacons of Ancestorship seems like a very big shift in sound from previous Tortoise albums. To what can you attribute this change?

Parker: We wanted to make a record that was more direct. The most important thing for us, as a band, is that we keep moving forward, and in order for us to do that sometimes we put self-imposed restrictions on what we allow ourselves to do. We made a conscious decision to leave the mallets off this record.

Did the Bumps project Dan Bitney, John Herndon and Jon McEntire did for Stones Throw harbor an influence on the Beacons sessions at all?

Tortoise

Parker: Two of the songs on Beacons were holdovers from the Bumps sessions, “Gigantes” and “Northern Something.” It seems like our approach to rhythm is more beat-oriented lately, less abstract. I know those cats had a great time making the Bumps album.


John, did you guys make any good connections at Stones Throw during the Bumps experience? Can we look forward to a Madlib-produced Tortoise album in the future?



Parker: I would dig that immensely! I heard that Madlib and Guilty Simpson did a Bumps remix, but I have yet to hear it. It may be just hearsay.


McEntire: I feel like at some point in the future I hope we could do something together, because [Madlib] seems real open and like a good person to collaborate with. We did finally get to meet him for the first time briefly when a bunch of the Stones Throw guys were in town for a show. They stopped by the studio when we were working on something in order to make the connection, personally. And yeah, I’m really hoping something comes out of that.


Tell me about the decision to leave the vibes off the new album.



Parker: We like to keep moving forward, and we felt as if the mallets were holding us back from progressing as a band. No one in the band is a virtuoso on the instrument; we just use it to color our songs. It was an easy decision to let it go.


McEntire: We definitely felt like we were wrapping up an era with the box set and what have you. We knew that with this new record we had to turn a corner somehow and come out with a really distinct voice. And yeah, I think it worked out okay. That seems to be the feedback we’re getting from people, that it’s kind of a different direction for us, which is great.


How do you feel you have grown as a musician since joining Tortoise?

Tortoise

Parker: I got taken out of my safety zone as an improviser. Before Tortoise I was playing jazz, primarily, and I had never really played in a band where the focus wasn’t specifically about improvisation. With Tortoise it was more about playing very specific parts. The only real improvisational aspect was in how you colored the different sections of the songs. It forced me to think about exploring the subtleties of ambience, exploring ambient sound. I had to deal with a very specific way of playing the [guitar]. It’s hard to imagine how I would’ve developed as a musician without my experiences from playing in Tortoise.


McEntire: That’s a tough one. I think, in a certain sense, we kind of set up a very, very loose template when we started. And, over time, we’ve been able to dive further into it and work on particular areas of detail and bring out things and articulate certain ideas within that raw framework. And that applies certain syntax to the abilities of the player. I think that’s kind of just the gist of it. It’s a long process of finding these areas of interest and strength and then building upon them.


John, have you thought about recording your own work as a solo artist?

McEntire: Yeah, definitely. I really want to, it’s just really been hard to find the time between the multiple band commitments and keeping the studio running – full time jobs on both accounts. I think it’s just gonna be a matter of religiously blocking out a bunch of time and throwing myself into it. I think it’s gonna have to be done at some point for my own sanity.


What kind of music?

McEntire: I think it would be pretty broad and cover a lot of styles and textures. It’ll probably be instrumental [laughs]. That much I can say.


Jeff, are you doing any recording as a solo artist? Can we expect a follow-up to The Relatives any time soon? If so, what direction are you taking your next solo album?

Tortoise

Parker: Yes, I plan on making another solo album. I’ve been making a lot of sample-based music over the past few years, and I’ve been trying to figure out how to mix it with improvising and composition.


Jeff, as a fan, when did you first discover Tortoise?

Parker: I first heard Tortoise at a 4th of July show at The Empty Bottle in Chicago in 1994. I was blown away, and knew that it was something that I could see myself being involved with. I was frustrated with what I was doing musically at the time and was looking for different outlets. It was early on, and I don’t even think their first record had been released at that point. It was the original lineup plus Brad Wood on saxophone.


Tell me about the packaging for Beacons of Ancestorship. How did you guys come up with the concept of the album art?

Parker: The artwork and design was done by a longtime friend of ours, a San Francisco/L.A.-based artist and designer named Andrew Paynter. His design company is called JUICE. He sent us some photos of power lines, and we thought they were great and fit the tone of our music beautifully.


McEntire: He submitted them, actually, as a first part of an idea for a video treatment. We really liked them. We weren’t really even thinking of them as cover art material at that time. We got into a situation where we desperately needed cover art and the deadline was approaching quickly and we hadn’t found anything. At that point we were just like, “Let’s revisit these photos and circle some of these together into a sleeve design.” And it’s great. There’s this American photographer from the 20th century who I really like, Terry Callahan, who actually did some telephone wire photos that are almost exactly like the ones on the cover. I believe his were shot back in the ’40s. So, I thought that was a nice little tie-in.


Tortoise has yet to put out a live album. Will that ever happen?

Parker: A live LP is something that we’ve been thinking about for a while now. I’m sure it will happen at some point, but I’m uncertain as to exactly when that would be. The studio is very central to how we make our music, but we really enjoy playing live, too.

McEntire: I think it would be cool to do because I think we could do it with a little twist somehow. So yeah, thanks for reminding me. We’ll put that on the short list of things to do [laughs].


When you guys hit the studio, does the material stem from extended jam sessions or do you all come in with ideas that get worked up from one person’s concept?

Tortoise

Parker: We get together and jam on occasion, but we rarely come up with anything that we can use. Years ago we came to terms with the fact that we’re not an improvising band. Everyone contributes ideas to the band individually, and then we all contribute collectively until we have something that we can work with.


How much material was worked up for Beacons? Are there any extras for b-sides or even an extra album?

Parker: We recorded a lot during the sessions for Beacons, but the strongest and most complete material is what ended up on the album. The Japanese version has two bonus tracks. One is a remix by Eye from the Boredoms, and the other is a collage of snippets from jam sessions that we had during the making of the record.


You guys are basically career artists at Thrill Jockey. Have you ever thought of going to another label or do you feel too embedded in the Thrill Jockey fabric to leave them?

McEntire: You know, I can’t really see anything like that as being particularly advantageous. It seems like, at best, it would just be like a parallel move, and I don’t know what necessary benefit that would give us. Early on I think we got a few little nibbles from major labels, but obviously things were completely different back in the mid ’90s. Now labels are barely figuring out how to stay afloat, much less try to pull established talent from smaller labels.


John, last question is for you. Seeing that all these great bands from the ’80s and early ’90s have been coming back together as of late – The Jesus Lizard, the original Dinosaur Jr., Faith No More, My Bloody Valentine – has there been talk about doing a reunion with your old pre-Tortoise band, Bastro?

McEntire: Well, we had some discussion about that when Drag City re-released our catalog, but we felt it was going to be too difficult at the time and there wasn’t really enough incentive to do it. But me, personally, I’d love to. I told those guys whenever you want to do it, I’m ready.

Tortoise – Prepare Your Coffin from Thrill Jockey Records on Vimeo.

Tortoise tour dates available here.

JamBase | Slow ‘n’ Steady
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Sexual selection in humans: Mr Muscle

The price and privilege of beefcake

WHY are men’s muscles so much bigger than women’s? Partly, of course, because men do the fighting and hunting. But also, perhaps, because women like men who can do these things well, and are thus attracted to muscular men. Both phenomena—competing with members of the same sex and showing off to members of the opposite—are subject to a form of evolution known as sexual selection. It is sexual selection that created the deer’s antlers and the peacock’s tail, and William Lassek of the University of Pittsburgh and Steven Gaulin of the University of California, Santa Barbara, think it explains men’s muscles as well.

The main characteristic of sexually selected features is that they are expensive to maintain. Since, whether competing or attracting, only the best will do, resources get piled into them, almost regardless of the consequences. In a study just published in Evolution and Human Behavior, Dr Lassek and Dr Gaulin show that this crucial characteristic is true for men’s muscles. …

Scientists Say Evolution Causing Women To Become Increasingly Beautiful (VIDEO)

Fox 5 Chicago aired a startling report about scientists claiming that evolution is causing women to become more beautiful.

Apparently, researchers found that beautiful women are reproducing at a higher rate and that they have a higher propor…