// Nature 376 (1995): 565–571.
[170] Leakey, R. The Origin of Humankind. Basic Books, New York, 1994.
[171] LEAKEY, R. & R. LEWIN Origins Reconsidered: In Search of What Makes us Human. Little Brown, London, 1992.
[172] LEAKEY, R. & R. Lewin The Sixth Extinction: Biodiversity and its Survival. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1996.
[173] Lewis-Williams, D. The Mind in the Cave. Thames and Hudson, London, 2002.
[174] LEWONTIN, R. C. The apportionment of human diversity // Evolutionary Biology 6 (1972): 381–398.
[175] LlEM. K. F. Evolutionary strategies and morphological innovations: cichlid pharyngeal jaws // Systematic Zoology 22 (1973): 425–441.
[176] Littlewood, D. T. J., Smith, A. B., Clough, K. A. &
R. H. EMSON The interrelationships of the echinoderm classes: Morphological and molecular evidence // Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 61 (1997): 409–438.
[177] Liu, F. G. R., Miyamoto, M. M., Freire, N. P, et al. Molecular and morphological supertrees for eutherian (placental) mammals // Science 291 (2001): 1786–1789.
[178] LORENZ, K. Man Meets Dog. Routledge Classics, Routledge, London, 2002.
[179] Lovejoy, C. O. The origin of man // Science 211 (1981): 341–350.
[180] Luo, Z.-X., Cifelli, R. L. & Z. Kielan-Jaworowska Dual origin of tribosphenic mammals // Nature 409 (2001): 53–57.
[181] Manger, P R. & J. D. Pettigrew Electroreception and feeding behaviour of the platypus (Ornithorhychus anatinus: Monotrema: Mammalia) // Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London: Biological Sciences 347 (1995): 359–381.
[182] Marcus, G. F. & S. E. Fisher FOXP2 in focus: what can genes tell us about speech and language? // Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (2003): 257–262.
[183] MARGULIS, L. Symbiosis in Cell Evolution. W H. Freeman, San Francisco, 1981.
[184] MARK Welch, D. & M. Meselson Evidence for the evolution of bdelloid rotifers without sexual reproduction or genetic exchange // Science 288 (2000): 1211–1219.
[185] MARTIN, R. D. Relative brain size and basal metabolic rate in terrestrial vertebrates // Nature 293 (1981): 57–60.
[186] Mash, R. How to Keep Dinosaurs. Weidenfeld & Nicholson, London, 2003/1983.
[187] Maynard Smith, J. The Evolution of Sex. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1978.
[188] MAYNARD Smith, J. Evolution – contemplating life without sex // Nature 324 (1986): 300–301.
[189] Maynard Smith, J. & E. SzaTHMAry The Major Transitions in Evolution. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1995.
[190] Mayr, E. The Growth of Biological Thought. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1985/1982.
[191] Medina, M., Collins, A. G., Silberman, J. D. & M. L. So-GIN Evaluating hypotheses of basal animal phylogeny using complete sequences of large and small subunit rRNA // Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 98 (2001): 9707–9712.
[192] Menotti-Raymond, M. & S.J. O’Brien Dating the genetic bottleneck of the African cheetah // Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 90 (1993): 3172–3176.
[193] MlLlUS, S. Bdelloids: No sex for over 40 million years