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Footprints and at
Footprints from azhdarchids show that at least some pterosaurs walked with an erect, rather than sprawling, posture.
K. R. N. F is also producing a documentary ( both in Malayalam and English ) on the life of K. R. Narayanan, entitled The Footprints Of Survival, aimed at propagating the ideals and perpetuating the memory of K. R. Narayanan.
Footprints found at the crime scene lead to Richard Haywood, who has an alibi.
* Curious Footprints: Professor Hitchcock's Dinosaur Tracks & Other Natural History Treasures at Amherst College ( Amherst College Press, 2006 )
* King, P. W. " Technological Advacne in the Severn Gorge ", in P. Belford et al., Footprints of Industry: papers from the 300th anniversary conference at Coalbrookdale, 3 – 7 June 2009 ( BAR British Series 523, 2010 ).
* Rich, P. & Green, R. H. ( 1974 ) Footprints of birds at South Mt Cameron, Tasmania.

Footprints and Laetoli
The Laetoli Footprints ” received significant recognition by the public, providing convincing evidence of bipedalism in Pliocene hominids based on analysis of the impressions.
In 1978, the discovery of hominid tracks —“ The Laetoli Footprints ”— by Mary Leakey gained significant recognition by both scientists and laymen, providing convincing evidence of bipedalism in Pliocene hominids.
However, recent study of the Sadiman volcano has shown that the volcano is not a source for the Laetoli Footprints Tuff ( Zaitsev et al.
Laetoli Footprints.
PBS Video, Evolution: Library: Laetoli Footprints, 2001.
* Footprints to Fill: Flat feet and doubts about makers of the Laetoli tracks-Scientific American Magazine ( August 2005 )
* Hominid Footprints and Laetoli: Facts and Interpretations ( 1987 ) White, Suwa http :// dl2af5jf3e. search. serialssolutions. com. proxy. lib. umich. edu /? sid = CSA: zooclust-set-c & pid =% 3CAN % 3EZOOR12300058872 % 3C % 2FAN % 3E % 26 % 3CPY % 3E1987 % 3C % 2FPY % 3E % 26 % 3CAU % 3EWhite % 2C % 20T % 2ED % 2E % 3B % 20Suwa % 2C % 20G % 2E % 3C % 2FAU % 3E & issn = 0002-9483 & volume = 72 & issue = 4 & spage = 485 & epage = 514 & date = 1987 & genre = article & aulast = White & auinit = TD & title = American % 20Journal % 20of % 20Physical % 20Anthropology & atitle = Hominid % 20footprints % 20at % 20Laetoli % 3A % 20facts % 20and % 20interpretations
* The Laetoli Footprints ( 1996 ) Agnew, Demas, Leakey http :// www. jstor. org. proxy. lib. umich. edu / stable / pdfplus / 2890795. pdf? acceptTC = true

Footprints and .
Footprints of its feet have been found showing a covering of hair which indicates it had a coat similar to a modern wombat.
* 1855 – The Devil's Footprints mysteriously appear in southern Devon.
Shorter became the group's principal composer, and some of his compositions of this era ( including " Footprints " and " Nefertiti ") have become standards.
Footprints in marble, said to be those of Jesus Christ, preserved in the Church of Domine Quo Vadis.
#* D. Hunt, Footprints in Cyprus ( London, Trigraph 1990 ).
Hawker described the wrecking in his book Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall.
* " Footprints on Rock ", 1997, Sydney: Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Footprints & Sunset on Adirondack Trails: The Memoirs of James Manchester Wardner 1831-1904, privately published by Joan Wardner Allen, printed by Graphics North, Jay, NY.
Vermont Place Names: Footprints of History.
However, The Vermont Road Atlas and Guide ( Northern Cartographic, 1989 ) uses Warners Grant ( p. 63 ), as do Vermont Place-Names: Footprints of History by Esther M. Swift ( The Stephen Greene Press, 1977, pp 220 – 2 ), and the Vermont Atlas and Gazetteer ( Delorme, 9th ed., 1996, p. 55 ).
The Vermont Road Atlas and Guide ( Northern Cartographic, 1989 ) uses Warren Gore ( p. 63 ) as does Vermont Place-Names: Footprints of History by Esther M. Swift ( The Stephen Greene Press, 1977, pp. 222 – 3 ).
* The Footprints of God, novel written by author Greg Iles.

at and Laetoli
The oldest hominid fossils ever discovered in Tanzania also come from Laetoli and are the 3. 6 to 3. 8 million year old remains of Australopithecus afarensis — Louis Leakey had found what he thought was a baboon tooth at Laetoli in 1935 ( which was not identified as afarensis until 1979 ), a fragment of hominid jaw with three teeth was found there by Kohl-Larsen in 1938 – 39, and in 1974 – 75 Mary Leakey recovered 42 teeth and several jawbones from the site.
The earliest evidence of fundamentally bipedal hominids can be observed at the site of Laetoli in Tanzania.
Despite Laetoli being the type locality for A. afarensis, the most extensive remains assigned to the species are found in Hadar, Afar Region of Ethiopia, including the above-mentioned " Lucy " partial skeleton and the " First Family " found at the AL 333 locality.
After Mary's husband died, she continued her work at Olduvai and Laetoli.
It was here, at the Laetoli site, that she discovered Hominin fossils that were more than 3. 75 million-years-old.
The years that followed this discovery were filled with research at Olduvai and Laetoli, the follow-up work to discoveries and preparing publications.
The footprints and skeletal structure excavated at Laetoli showed clear evidence that bipedalism preceded enlarged brains in hominids.
Although much debated upon, it has been determined that Australopithecus afarensis is the species of the three hominins who made the footprints at Laetoli.
Analysis of the footprints at Laetoli give these characteristics of obligate bi-pedalism: pronounced heel strike from deep impressions, lateral transmission of force from the heel to the base of the lateral metatarsal, a well-developed medial longitudinal arch, adducted big toe, and a deep impression for the big toe commensurate with toe-off.
Two dating techniques have been used to arrive at the approximate age of the beds that make up the ground layers at Laetoli.
Artifacts from the younger Olpiro and Ngaloba Beds, also preserved at Laetoli, have been found.
Before the discovery of the footprints found at Laetoli there was much debate as to what developed first in the evolutionary time line: a larger brain or bipedalism.
Leakey and her team of these footprints therefore settled the issue proving that the hominids found at Laetoli were fully bipedal before the evolution of the modern human brain, and were even bipedal close to a million years before the earliest stone tools .< ref > Agnew, Neville and Demas, Martha.
The findings at Laetoli also provide insight into the climate at the time of the making of the footprints based on stratigraphic analysis.
Pliocene sediments at Laetoli show that the environment in which the footprint impressions were found was moister and more productive than now.
This could have initiated the evolution to bipedalism of the hominids found at Laetoli.
Discoveries at Laetoli in Northern Tanzania.
Hominid footprints at Laetoli: Facts and Interpretations.
* Leakey, M. D. and Hay, R. L .-Pliocene footprints in the Laetolil Beds at Laetoli, northern Tanzania-Nature
* Discoveries at Laetoli in northern Tanzania ( 1981 ) Leakey http :// www. sciencedirect. com. proxy. lib. umich. edu / science? _ob = MiamiImageURL & _cid = 277817 & _user = 99318 & _pii = S0016787881800089 & _check = y & _origin = gateway & _coverDate = 31-Dec-1981 & view = c & wchp = dGLzVlV-zSkzk & md5 = a7cf44a39140aef5bc4fd70507388848 / 1-s2. 0-S0016787881800089-main. pdf
* Fossil animal footprints found at Laetoli, Tanzania.

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