Human geography -- Vanuatu. : The tree and the canoe : history and ethnogeography of Tanna / Joel Bonnemaison ; translated and adapted by Josee Penot-Demetry
Human geography -- West (U.S.) -- History : Water histories and spatial archaeology : ancient Yemen and the American West / Michael J. Harrower (Johns Hopkins University)
Human growth -- Encyclopedias. : The Cambridge encyclopedia of human growth and development / edited by Stanley J. Ulijaszek, Francis E. Johnston, and Michael A. Preece
1998
1
Human growth -- Endocrine aspects : Growth hormone related diseases and therapy : a molecular and physiological perspective for the clinician / Ken Ho, editor
2011
1
Human growth -- Great Britain -- History. : Height, health, and history : nutritional status in the United Kingdom, 1750-1980 / Roderick Floud, Kenneth Wachter, and Annabel Gregory
Human Growth Hormone -- genetics : Growth hormone related diseases and therapy : a molecular and physiological perspective for the clinician / Ken Ho, editor
Human growth -- New Guinea. : Growth and development in New Guinea : a study of the Bundi people of the Madang district / L.A. Malcolm
1970
1
Human growth -- Nutritional aspects. : Getting it right : how to use the data from the 1995 National Nutrition Survey / prepared by Ingrid H E Rutishauser
A coordinated international effort to identify and catalog patterns of linked variations (HAPLOTYPES) found in the human genome across the entire human population
A coordinated international effort to identify and catalog patterns of linked variations (HAPLOTYPES) found in the human genome across the entire human population
1
Human heredity : Health, illness and wellbeing : perspectives and social determinants / edited by Pranee Liamputtong, Rebecca Fanany and Glenda Verrinder
Infection with human herpesvirus 4 (HERPESVIRUS 4, HUMAN); which may facilitate the development of various lymphoproliferative disorders. These include BURKITT LYMPHOMA (African type), INFECTIOUS MONONUCLEOSIS, and oral hairy leukoplakia (LEUKOPLAKIA, HAIRY)
The type species of SIMPLEXVIRUS causing most forms of non-genital herpes simplex in humans. Primary infection occurs mainly in infants and young children and then the virus becomes latent in the dorsal root ganglion. It then is periodically reactivated throughout life causing mostly benign conditions
Human herpesvirus 3 -- pathogénicité. : Varicella-Zoster virus : molecular biology, pathogenesis, and clinical aspects / volume editors, Manfred H. Wolff, Stefan Schunemann, Axel Schmidt