Atlantis Angrivari-Panadian-Canada-Latvian-Proto-Uralic-Latin-Greek-Prussian-Einigkeit-American Batavus-Dutch-VOC Breda-Brittany-Englion Batavia Erie-Canal 1823CE French-Mark Twain Gerrit S. Miller Jr

$500,000.00

Profee.me/TowerOne

Atlantis Angrivari-Panadian-Canada-Latvian-Proto-Uralic-Latin-Greek-Prussian-Einigkeit-American Batavus-Dutch-VOC Breda-Brittany-Englion Batavia Erie-Canal 1823CE French-Mississippi Company Mark Twain

https://www.profee.me/atlantis/p/angrivari-latinform-latin-english

metabolictopology.com/BHSRC

MORMON LETTERS

metabolictopology.com/BHSRU

The horse

https://www.profee.me/atlantis/p/jagiellonian-law-new-atlantis-american-with-confessaconter-revelations

https://www.profee.me/atlantis/p/atlantis-angrivari-kepler-principia-leibnitz-principia-against-the-newtonification-of-continentals

Atlantis Angrivari-American AppleChimpanzee The Primate Basis of Human Sexual Behavior" is a prominent, often-cited scientific article published in December 1931 by American zoologist Gerrit S. Miller, Jr.. The paper appeared in the peer-reviewed journal The Quarterly Review of Biology (Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 379–410).Key Scientific Themes and ImpactThe Core Thesis: Miller argued that human sexual behaviors and social structures have deep, observable evolutionary roots in non-human primates. Rather than viewing human sexuality strictly through a lens of unique cultural or moral development, he contextualized it as part of an evolutionary continuum shared with apes and monkeys.Continuous Sexual Receptivity: A crucial part of Miller's work focused on how anthropoid primates differ from other mammals. In most mammals, sexual activity is restricted to a strict estrus cycle governed entirely by hormones. Miller highlighted how primates possess an "emancipation" from this rigid hormonal control, allowing for year-round, non-conceptive sexual behavior used to navigate complex social structures.Methodology: As a curator of mammals at the Smithsonian Institution's U.S. National Museum, Miller utilized comparative anatomy, behavioral observations, and field reports of wild and captive primates (such as gibbons and macaques) to compile his evidence.Context and Influence: Published just two years after Dr. Katharine Bement Davis’s landmark study on human female sexuality, Miller's 1931 paper provided the biological counterpart to the era's emerging sociological research. It helped build the early foundations for modern primatology, evolutionary psychology, and comparative sexology.

Profee.me/TowerOne

Atlantis Angrivari-Panadian-Canada-Latvian-Proto-Uralic-Latin-Greek-Prussian-Einigkeit-American Batavus-Dutch-VOC Breda-Brittany-Englion Batavia Erie-Canal 1823CE French-Mississippi Company Mark Twain

https://www.profee.me/atlantis/p/angrivari-latinform-latin-english

metabolictopology.com/BHSRC

MORMON LETTERS

metabolictopology.com/BHSRU

The horse

https://www.profee.me/atlantis/p/jagiellonian-law-new-atlantis-american-with-confessaconter-revelations

https://www.profee.me/atlantis/p/atlantis-angrivari-kepler-principia-leibnitz-principia-against-the-newtonification-of-continentals

Atlantis Angrivari-American AppleChimpanzee The Primate Basis of Human Sexual Behavior" is a prominent, often-cited scientific article published in December 1931 by American zoologist Gerrit S. Miller, Jr.. The paper appeared in the peer-reviewed journal The Quarterly Review of Biology (Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 379–410).Key Scientific Themes and ImpactThe Core Thesis: Miller argued that human sexual behaviors and social structures have deep, observable evolutionary roots in non-human primates. Rather than viewing human sexuality strictly through a lens of unique cultural or moral development, he contextualized it as part of an evolutionary continuum shared with apes and monkeys.Continuous Sexual Receptivity: A crucial part of Miller's work focused on how anthropoid primates differ from other mammals. In most mammals, sexual activity is restricted to a strict estrus cycle governed entirely by hormones. Miller highlighted how primates possess an "emancipation" from this rigid hormonal control, allowing for year-round, non-conceptive sexual behavior used to navigate complex social structures.Methodology: As a curator of mammals at the Smithsonian Institution's U.S. National Museum, Miller utilized comparative anatomy, behavioral observations, and field reports of wild and captive primates (such as gibbons and macaques) to compile his evidence.Context and Influence: Published just two years after Dr. Katharine Bement Davis’s landmark study on human female sexuality, Miller's 1931 paper provided the biological counterpart to the era's emerging sociological research. It helped build the early foundations for modern primatology, evolutionary psychology, and comparative sexology.