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© Center for a Public Anthropology,
Robert Borofsky (2002)
All Rights Reserved

 

The Raw, Unedited LexisNexis Data That
Were Used to Compile
the List of Citations Referred to Here

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Jack Broughton

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Seattle Times, December 7, 1993, Tuesday, Final Edition, SCENE; DIGEST; Pg. E1, 212 words, DIGEST, BY BILL DIETRICH

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Elizabeth Cashdan

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The New York Times, August 2, 1999, Monday, Late Edition - Final, Section B; Page 1; Column 1; Metropolitan Desk , 732 words, The Big City; What It Takes To Become A Father, By JOHN TIERNEY
2. The Guardian (London), March 20, 1999, The Guardian Weekend Page; Pg. 11, 5743 words, How is it for you?; The new wave of evolutionists think they know what man, the natural-born Casanova, and woman, the eternal monogamist, really, really want. But look around you. It ain't necessarily so, BY NATALIE ANGIER
3. The New York Times, February 21, 1999, Sunday, Late Edition - Final, Section 6; Page 48; Column 1; Magazine Desk , 4982 words, Men, Women, Sex And Darwin, By Natalie Angier; Natalie Angier writes about biology for The New York Times. This article is adapted from "Woman: An Intimate Geography," to be published by Houghton Mifflin in April.
4. The Seattle Times, August 3, 1993, Tuesday, Final Edition, SCENE; DISCOVERY; Pg. E1, 1880 words, UNRAVELING THE MYSTERIES OF MATING, BY WILLIAM F. ALLMAN

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. New Scientist, December 3, 1994, Features, Pg. 2828, 2916 words, Why Presidents have more sons: Most people think that the sex of their baby is just pot luck. In fact it may not be random at all, MATT RIDLEY (AUTHOR, THE RED QUEEN: SEX AND THE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN NATURE, PENGUIN)
2. U.S. News & World Report, July 19, 1993, SCIENCE & SOCIETY; Vol. 115,, No. 3; Pg. 57, 3092 words, The mating game, By William F. Allman
3. U.S. News & World Report, November 2, 1992, SCIENCE & SOCIETY; Vol. 113,, No. 17; Pg. 62, 2568 words, Political chemistry, By

Henry Harpending

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:

1. The Jerusalem Post, November 30, 2005, Wednesday, OPINION; Pg. 15, 969 words, Are Jews born smart?, Jeremy Maissel
2. Ottawa Citizen, October 5, 2005 Wednesday, Final Edition, NEWS; Pg. A13, 182 words, If study on Jews is right, then I must be a moron, Robert Eady, The Ottawa Citizen
3. Ottawa Citizen, October 1, 2005 Saturday, Final Edition, NEWS; Pg. A1 , 3227 words, Rushton Revisited, Andrew Duffy, The Ottawa Citizen
4. Newsday (New York), September 9, 2005 Friday, ALL EDITIONS, NEWS; Pg. A44, 427 words, Is brain still developing?; Discovery of two gene variations have some scientists saying that human think tank will continue to evolve, BY JAMIE TALAN. STAFF WRITER
5. Ottawa Citizen, June 30, 2005 Thursday, Final Edition, NEWS; Peter McKnight; Pg. A17, 1231 words, Don't dismiss race: While racial stereotyping has done much harm, it is important to understand the genetic differences between peoples, Peter McKnight, The Vancouver Sun
6. Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO), June 11, 2005 Saturday Final Edition, COMMENTARY/EDITORIAL; Pg. 13C, 895 words, CAN SOCIAL PRESSURE TO BE SMART HAVE ALTERED GENES?, Linda Seebach, Rocky Mountain News
7. The New York Times, June 3, 2005 Friday, Late Edition - Final, Section A; Column 1; National Desk; Pg. 21, 1525 words, Researchers Say Intelligence and Diseases May Be Linked in Ashkenazic Genes, By NICHOLAS WADE
8. The New York Times, December 2, 2003 Tuesday, Late Edition - Final , Section F; Column 3; Science Desk; Pg. 1, 1402 words, For a Good Time, Well, Don't Call Dad , By MARY DUENWALD
9. The New York Times, July 15, 2003 Tuesday, Late Edition - Final , Section F; Column 2; Science Desk; Pg. 3, 967 words, Why We Die, Why We Live: A New Theory on Aging , By NICHOLAS WADE
10. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania), March 10, 2003 Monday, SOONER EDITION, Pg.A-8, 616 words, NEANDERTHALS, EARLY HUMANS DIDN'T MATE
11. THE DAILY TELEGRAPH(LONDON), December 27, 2002, Friday, Pg. 30, 700 words, Doubt cast on 'out of Africa' theory of man, By Roger Highfield Science Editor
12. The Straits Times (Singapore), December 27, 2002 Friday, TECH & SCIENCE, 490 words, Origins of Man: Out of Africa, then what?; Data from human genome project shows second exodus led to interbreeding, not population replacement, say researchers
13. The Advertiser, March 9, 2002, Saturday, OPINION; Pg. 29, 1053 words, Sexual Eve-olution, FAYE FLAM
14. The New York Times, January 12, 1999, Tuesday, Late Edition - Final, Section F; Page 4; Column 3; Science Desk , 1008 words, Of Tortoises, Hares and the Peopling of Earth, By NICHOLAS WADE
Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. Maclean's, October 10, 2005, LIZZIE'S CENTURY; 2055; Chapter Five, Age Fifty; Pg. 115, 2694 words, A CURE FOR EVERYTHING, BY ALLEN ABEL
2. The Economist, June 4, 2005, U.S. Edition, SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1352 words, Natural genius?; The evolution of intelligence
3. U.S. News & World Report, August 19, 2002, SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY; Vol. 133 , No. 7; Pg. 50, 1114 words, The gene that wouldn't sit still, By Emily Sohn


Kristen Hawkes

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Australian, March 11, 2004 Thursday All-round Country Edition, LOCAL; Pg. 3, 266 words, 'Grandmother hypothesis' breeds age-old success story, Leigh Dayton, Elizabeth Colman
2. The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec), March 11, 2004 Thursday Final Edition, News; Pg. A4, 804 words, Grandma is good for you: A study of Quebec and Finnish families supports hypothesis that links long lives of women to usefulness of grandmothers, MARGARET MUNRO, OTTAWA
3. Ottawa Citizen, March 11, 2004 Thursday Final Edition, News; Pg. A3, 803 words, Thank Grandma for your long life: Quebec's detailed birth and death records have proved an old theory: that long-lived, prolific women have exerted enormous influence on human evolution. Margaret Munro reports on the 'grandmother hypothesis.', Margaret Munro
4. Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia), February 10, 2003, Monday, NEWS; Pg. 12, 96 words, The evolution of gran
5. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania), October 26, 1999, Tuesday,, SOONER EDITION, Pg. A-2,, 214 words, ON THIS DATE, COMPILED BY EMILY L. BELL AND MILAN SIMONICH
6. Times-Picayune (New Orleans, LA), July 13, 1999 Tuesday, ORLEANS, LIVING; Pg. F3, 263 words, SCIENTISTS STUDY HUMAN FATHERS AS BABY SITTERS, By Sue Goetinck The Dallas Morning News
7. Buffalo News (New York), June 20, 1999, Sunday, FINAL EDITION, SCIENCE, Pg. 6H, 926 words, EVOLUTION OF FATHERING DEBATED BY SCIENTISTS, SUE GOETINCK; Dallas Morning News
8. The Houston Chronicle, June 20, 1999, Sunday, 2 STAR EDITION, TEXAS MAGAZINE;, Pg. 8, 4387 words, Evolution Revolution; Why did the chicken cross the road? If it was male, probably for a tender young pullet; if it was female, probably for a powerful old rooster. Symbolically speaking, these are a couple of controversial gender tenets underlying University of Texas professor David Buss's Theory of Evolutionary Psychology, the newest and most hotly debated skirmish in the everlasting battle between male and female., MELISSA FLETCHER STOELTJE;
9. Financial Times (London,England), April 17, 1999, Saturday, W EDITION 1, OFF CENTRE;, Pg. 09, 1169 words, ...and women can be more macho, too: Husbands may be useful, but when it comes to foraging for survival, grandmothers are more important, says Jerom
10. The Ottawa Citizen, March 21, 1999, FINAL, 2608 words, The truth about women's bodies: The new 'femaleism' can be summarized as: Yes, we are different -- wanna make something of it? Barbara Ehrenreich reports., Barbara Ehrenreich
11. Financial Times (London,England), March 13, 1999, Saturday, W EDITION 1, BODY AND MIND;, Pg. 02, 862 words, Multiple fathers bring out the best
12. Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio), November 15, 1998 Sunday, FINAL / ALL, LIVING; Pg. 8J, 273 words, SCIENTISTS SAY GRANDMOTHERS HELPED MAN'S EVOLUTION, By ROBIN McKIE; LONDON OBSERVER
13. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania), October 26, 1998, Monday,, SOONER EDITION, Pg. A-10, 610 words, THE GRANNY THEORY; PREHISTORIC OLD WOMEN HELPED FEED THEIR GRANDCHILDREN, ENSURING HUMAN SUCCESS, ROBIN MCKIE, LONDON OBSERVER SERVICE
14. Chicago Sun-Times, October 21, 1998, WEDNESDAY, Late Sports Final Edition, NEWS; Pg. 68, 310 words, Grandmas played key role in evolution, BY ROBIN MCKIE
15. St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri), October 18, 1998, Sunday, THREE STAR EDITION, METRO, Pg. D11, 433 words, CREDIT GRANDMAS FOR MAN'S EVOLUTION, RESEARCHER SAYS, London Observer, LONDON
16. The Toronto Star, October 17, 1998, Saturday, SATURDAY SECOND EDITION, LIFE; Pg. L3, 938 words, The 'granny effect' in action Grandmothers may live long and prosper because of their vital role, By Sarah Jane Growe Toronto Star
17. The Toronto Star, October 17, 1998, Saturday, Edition 1, LIFE, 990 words, THE 'GRANNY EFFECT' IN ACTION
18. The Scotsman, September 25, 1998, Friday, Pg. 16, 1505 words, RETIRE, THEN LIGHT THE BLUE TOUCH PAPER, Thea Jourdan
19. The Observer, September 20, 1998, The Observer News Page; Pg. 1, 559 words, Granny power is secret of human survival, BY ROBIN MCKIE SCIENCE EDITOR
20. The Boston Globe, June 22, 1998, Monday, City Edition, SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY; Pg. D2, 820 words, Whatever are grandmothers for? Science Musings / CHET RAYMO; Chet Raymo is a professor of physics at Stonehill College and the author of several books on science., By Chet Raymo
21. The Washington Post, April 27, 1998, Monday, Final Edition, A SECTION; Pg. A02; SCIENCE NOTEBOOK, 238 words, BIOLOGY: Menopause Without Purpose?
22. The Ottawa Citizen, April 23, 1998, Thursday, FINAL EDITION, NEWS; Pg. A11, 507 words, Menopause:Why do women have it at all?, MALCOLM RITTER; THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, NEW YORK
23. The Independent (London), April 17, 1998, Friday, FEATURES; Page 14, 766 words, Why are men hopeless? It's all in the mind; New research claims the development of our behaviour is mirrored in the animal kingdom, writes Jerome Burns, Jerome Burns
24. Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO), March 31, 1998, Tuesday,, SPOTLIGHT ON HEALTH & FITNESS; Ed. F; Pg. 5D, 463 words, GRANDMA THEORY MAY SOLVE PRIMATE PUZZLE, Lee Siegel; Salt Lake Tribune; Scripps-McClatchy Western Service
25. The Toronto Star, March 1, 1998, Sunday, SUNDAY SECOND EDITION, SCIENCE; Pg. F8, 681 words, Evolution even gave us granny, By Jay Ingram
26. The Washington Post, February 09, 1998, Monday, Final Edition, A SECTION; Pg. A03; SCIENCE: EVOLUTION, 1129 words, From Ancient Grandmas, a Theory of Longevity and Menopause, Curt Suplee, Washington Post Staff Writer
27. Buffalo News (New York), October 8, 1997, Wednesday, CITY EDITION, VIEWPOINTS, Pg. 3B, 592 words, I FEEL A POWER SURGE COMING ON, Ellen Goodman, BOSTON
28. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania), October 8, 1997, Wednesday,, SOONER EDITION, Pg. A-21, 650 words, A GRANDMA HYPOTHESIS; GOOD NEWS FROM ANTHROPLOGY: OLDER AND WISER IS PART OF THE PLAN, ELLEN GOODMAN, BOSTON
29. Tampa Tribune (Florida), October 7, 1997, Tuesday,, FINAL EDITION, Pg. 9, 648 words, Might women's productivity pick up where fertility leaves off?, ELLEN GOODMAN, BOSTON
30. Times-Picayune (New Orleans, LA), October 7, 1997 Tuesday, THIRD, METRO; Pg. B5, 645 words, HOT FLASH FOR BOOMERS, By Ellen Goodman, BOSTON
31. The Boston Globe, October 5, 1997, Sunday, City Edition, OP-ED; Pg. E7, 637 words, Meno-positive; ELLEN GOODMAN, By Ellen Goodman, Globe Staff
32. The New York Times, September 16, 1997, Tuesday, Late Edition - Final, Section F; Page 1; Column 4; Science Desk , 2115 words, Theorists See Evolutionary Advantages In Menopause, By NATALIE ANGIER

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. New Scientist, July 10, 2004, News; This Week; Pg. 14, 568 words, With grandparents came civilisation, Andy Coghlan
2. Prospect, June 24, 2004, 3733 words, Briefing Notes:Are we still evolving?, Gabrielle Walker
3. Newsweek, March 22, 2004 Atlantic Edition, SCIENCE; Pg. 53, 227 words, Go, Grandma, By Jaime Cunningham
4. New Scientist, January 24, 2004, Features; Pg. 35, 1913 words, Out with the lads; Our habit of hanging out with friends of our own sex has many parallels in nature. Why are single-sex groups so common, asks Catherine Lewis, Catherine Lewis; Catherine Lewis is a UK-based writer and editor
5. New Scientist, May 24, 2003, Human Nature; Human Nature; Pg. 46, 3151 words, New rules for an old game, Sarah Blaffer Hrdy
6. U.S. News & World Report, November 18, 2002, HEALTH & MEDICINE; COVER PACKAGE; SPECIAL REPORT; MENOPAUSE; Vol. 133 , No. 19; Pg. 71, 736 words, A world of differences, By Nancy Shute
7. India Today, August 5, 2002, Newsnotes; Pg.18, 706 words, Female Promiscuity Pakistan Foreign Secretary
8. The Economist, January 30, 1999, U.S. Edition, Business, Finance and Science; SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY; Pg. 74, 557 words, Anthropology. Paternity test
9. New Scientist, February 7, 1998, This Week, Pg. 1414, 268 words, Thanks Gran, Philip Cohen
10. WIN Magazine, November 1997, No. 3, 01589258, 1060 words, WHO'S MOMMY'S HELPER? GRANDMA! RETHINKING MENOPAUSE
11. The Economist, December 25, 1993, Evo-Economics; Pg. 93 (U.K. Edition Pg. 97), 2936 words, Biology meets the dismal science


Douglas Jones

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The New York Times, June 23, 2002 Sunday, Late Edition - Final , Section 14CN; Column 1; Connecticut Weekly Desk; Pg. 2, 1184 words, The View From/Haddam; A Former Slave's Property May Become a Nuclear Waste Site, By DICK AHLES
2. The Boston Globe, February 5, 1999, Friday, ,City Edition, LIVING; Pg. D13, 778 words, Beauty is in the genes of the beholder; BOOK REVIEW ; SURVIVAL OF THE PRETTIEST; The Science of Beauty; By Nancy Etcoff; Doubleday, 325 pp., illustrated, $23.95, By Suzanne C. Ryan, Globe Staff

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Laurence Loeb

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


John McCullough

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri), November 23, 1989, THURSDAY, THREE STAR Edition, NEWS; Pg. 4G, 654 words, MUMMY DUMPED AT MUSEUM

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


James O’Connell

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Dennis O’Rourke

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Richard Paine

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Lars Rodseth

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:


Alan Rogers

Citations in Major National/International Newspapers Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The New York Times, January 17, 2005 Monday, Late Edition - Final, Section A; Column 3; National Desk; Pg. 12, 1167 words, Scientists Find DNA Region That Affects Europeans' Fertility, By NICHOLAS WADE
2. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, October 17, 2004 Sunday, Home Edition, Pg. 1MS, 723 words, OF LICE AND MEN: Bugs link limbs of our family tree, BILL HENDRICK
3. The Washington Post, October 5, 2004 Tuesday, Final Edition, A Section; A12, 1054 words, Genetic Study of Lice Hints At Clash of Archaic Humans, Rick Weiss, Washington Post Staff Writer
4. The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec), August 23, 2003 Saturday Final Edition, Science; Pg. H16, 915 words, Why we lost our hair: Humans, it seems, wandered naked for a million years. We may have become hairless during a semi-aquatic phase, NICHOLAS WADE
5. The Washington Post, August 19, 2003 Tuesday, Final Edition, A SECTION; Pg. A01, 1155 words, Creative Search For Naked Truth; Study Uses Lice DNA to Find When Clothing First Appeared, Rick Weiss, Washington Post Staff Writer
6. Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia), July 8, 2003 Tuesday, NEWS; Pg. 20, 148 words, Why grannies are great
7. The New York Times, August 22, 2000, Tuesday, Late Edition - Final, Section F; Page 1; Column 1; Science Desk , 2244 words, Do Races Differ? Not Really, Genes Show, By NATALIE ANGIER
8. Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio), August 22, 2000 Tuesday, FINAL / ALL, NATIONAL; Pg. 1A, 773 words, RACE NO MORE THAN SKIN DEEP, DNA INDICATES, By NATALIE ANGIER; NEW YORK TIMES
9. The New York Times, January 25, 2000, Tuesday, Late Edition - Final Correction Appended, Section F;Page 6;Column 3;Science Desk, 895 words, A Genetic Tool to Track Evolution. Or Is It?, By BRENDA FOWLER
10. The New York Times, September 16, 1997, Tuesday, Late Edition - Final, Section F; Page 1; Column 4; Science Desk , 2115 words, Theorists See Evolutionary Advantages In Menopause, By NATALIE ANGIER
11. The Guardian (London), September 23, 1993, THE GUARDIAN FEATURES PAGE; Pg. 14, 1379 words, TWILIGHT ZONE'S NEW DAWN; Hot flushes, hormone deficiency . . . must we think of the menopause as a disease of modern life? Or has it evolved because it carries benefits for both women and their kin?, GAIL VINES

Citations in Magazines and Journals Listed in the LexisNexis Database:
1. The Economist, December 25, 1993, Evo-Economics; Pg. 93 (U.K. Edition Pg. 97), 2936 words, Biology meets the dismal science

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