Mary and Louis Leakey were palaeontologists responsible for the discovery of many fossils of early hominids. They are most well known for their discoveries of early human ancestors.
Noteworthy British Archaeologists and Anthropologists in Africa.
they were paleoanthropologists who made significant finds of early hominid species
Historical anthropology, and the discovery of ancient Hominid Fossils such as the Zinjanthropus- sometimes called Ape-man. Dr. Leakey ranks as an antrhopologist.
Louis Leakey (1903-1972) and Mary (1913-1996) Leakey were archeologists (scientists who study the remains of ancient human cultures) who made significant findings in East Africa.
mary and louis leakey and donald johanson are people that discory bones
archaeologists
the diction
Many of the world's people depend on fish as a primary food source.
Louis pastuer worked in Paris France in his own lab
mabey
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Louis Pasteur was a French chemist and a microbiologist..
i do not kwon
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I thing that it is not important and plus none of your business
I can't figure out either..
something that is important and necessary. If society helps them, they join in. If society obstructs, they give it up.
for people to use at work and going anywhere they like
artisans are important because they have specialized jobs so others don't have to work.
Louis Leakey
Robert Louis Stevenson is important to Samoa because he spent the last years of his life there, where he made significant contributions to the local community through his philanthropic work and his promotion of Samoan culture. He is admired in Samoa for his literary legacy and for choosing to make Samoa his home. Stevenson's impact on Samoan society and culture continues to be celebrated and remembered in the country.
My family? Communication and hard work.
Many of the world's people depend on fish as a primary food source.
British/Kenyan archaeologist and anthropologist who became famous for his academic work centered on human origins. Louis Leakey, his wife Mary, and their second son Richard made the key discoveries that have shaped our understanding of the first men. Richard Leakey and his wife, Maeve, sustain a family legacy of research that is now, with the work of their daughter Louise, three generations deep.