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Ardi is the most complete early hominid specimen, with most of the skull, teeth, pelvis, hands and feet, dating back 4.4 million years. She had both bipedal and arboreal features, suggesting a transition between apes and humans.
The Access to Research for Development and Innovation (ARDI) program, coordinated by WIPO together with its partners in the publishing industry, aims to increase the availability of scientific and technical information in developing countries.
The Access to Research for Development and Innovation (ARDI) program, coordinated by WIPO together with its partners in the publishing industry, provides free online access to major scientific and technical journals to local, not-for-profit institutions in least-developed countries and low-cost access to industrial property offices in ...
Ardi is a nickname for a 4.4-million-year-old female hominid skeleton found in Ethiopia. She belongs to Ardipithecus ramidus, a very ancient hominid that walked upright and had small canine teeth.
1 Οκτ 2009 · Fifteen years in the making, a dossier of papers on "Ardi" published in Science suggest that like humans, chimpanzees have undergone substantial evolutionary change
The Access to Research for Development and Innovation (ARDI) program is coordinated by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) together with its partners in the publishing industry with the aim to increase the availability of scientific and technical information in developing countries.
3 Ιαν 2024 · A partial skeleton of a female, known as "Ardi", combines human and other primate traits. Ardi moved in the trees using a grasping big toe, yet her pelvis was shorter and broader than an ape's, indicating that she could walk bipedally.