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Mar 30, 2026
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ANT 303 - Earth and Life Through Time: Vertebrate Paleontology & Paleoecology (with emphasis on the Turkana Basin) Vertebrate fossils are important sources of information about the appearance, evolution, and extinction of major organisms. As such, they provide a valuable window into changes in climate and selection pressures, and organisms’ diverse adaptive responses to these changes. They are also significant in placing hominid discoveries within a relative local chronology, and helping reconstruct environments associated with hominid finds. This course acquaints students with methods of vertebrate paleontology employed in different chronological contexts of the Turkana Basin, used to solve diverse theoretical questions.
3 credits
Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor/Study Abroad office
Offered: Formerly offered as ANP 305. Not for credit in addition to ANP 305.
DEC: E
SBC: SNW, Partially fulfills: TECH
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