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El. knyga: Functional and Evolutionary Biology of Primates [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formatas: 536 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Aug-2007
  • Leidėjas: AldineTransaction
  • ISBN-13: 9781315132129
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 161,57 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 230,81 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 536 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Aug-2007
  • Leidėjas: AldineTransaction
  • ISBN-13: 9781315132129
These original contributions on the evolution of primates and the techniques for studying the subject cover an enormous range of material and incorporate the work of specialists from many different fields, showing the necessity of a multidisciplinary approach to problems of primate morphology and phylogeny. Collectively, they demonstrate the concerns and methods of leading contemporary workers in this and related fields. Each contributor shows his way of attacking fundamental problems of evolutionary primatology.The range of findings in this book include new clues to the evolution of the middle ear and the subsistence behavior of early primates, a persuasive critique of the Smith-Jones hypothesis that many features of primate cranial morphology are adaptations to the special vicissitudes of arboreal habitation, the remarkable association of relative muscle mass in the hands and feet of catarrhine primates with the particularities of prehensile behaviors, the wealth of behavioral data that may be obtained by the concentrated study of certain primates in the vicinity of waterholes, the striking differences between inferences about the same behavioral phenomena that are based on long-term as opposed to short-term observations of one primate social group, and the strategy of sophisticated mathematical techniques for elucidating biomechanical, evolutionary, and behavioral problems.Each chapter conveys the status and progress of research in these and other particular areas of special interest, pointing the way toward further clarification of the functional biology and phylogeny of primates through the application of relatively new techniques or the comprehensive employment of available methods. No attempt is made to smooth over controversial points of view, or to endorse a single uniform model of primate evolution. This work will be an important reference for evolutionary and physical anthropologists, evolutionary biologists, comparative morphologists, human anatomists, behavioralists, and students of evolution.
Introduction vii
Russell Tuttle
I. PALEOPRIMATOLOGY 1
1. Paleobiology of the Earliest Primates
3
Frederick S. Szalay
2. Hominoid Paleoprimatology
36
Elwyn L. Simons and David R. Pilbeam
3. Progress and Problems in the Study of Early Man in Sub-Saharan Africa
63
Phillip V. Tobias
II. CRANIAL MORPHOLOGY 95
4. Arboreal Adaptations and the Origin of the Order Primates
97
Matt Cartmill
5. Analysis of Patterns of Variation in Crania of Recent Man
123
W.W. Howells
III. COMPARATIVE NEUROBIOLOGY AND ENDOCASTS 153
6. Evolution of Primate Brains: A Comparative Anatomical Investigation
155
Heinz Stephan
7. Endocasts and Studies of Primate Brain Evolution
175
Leonard Radinsky
8. Australopithecine Endocasts, Brain Evolution in the Hominoidea, and a Model of Hominid Evolution
185
Ralph L. Holloway
IV. POSTCRANIAL MORPHOLOGY 205
9. Evolution of the Hominoid Wrist
207
Owen J. Lewis
10. Vertebral Morphology of Fossil and Extant Primates
223
Friderun Ankel
11. Tail Reduction in Macaca
241
Donald R. Wilson
12. Relative Mass of Cheiridial Muscles in Catarrhine Primates
262
Russell Tuttle
13. Biomechanics of Human Posture and Locomotion: Perspectives from Electromyography
292
John V. Basmajian
14. Functional Morphology of Primates: Some Mathematical and Physical Methods
305
Charles E. Oxnard
15. The Use of Optical Data Analysis in Functional Morphology: Investigation of Vertebral Trabecular Patterns
337
Charles E. Oxnard
V. ASPECTS OF BEHAVIOR AND ECOLOGY 349
16. The Behavior of Gray Langurs at a Ceylonese Waterhole
351
Benjamin B. Beck and Russell Tuttle
17. A Longitudinal Study of Social Behavior of Rhesus Monkeys
378
Donald Stone Sade
18. The Organization of Primate Societies: Longitudinal Studies of Captive Groups
399
Irwin S. Bernstein
19. Aping Monkeys with Mathematics
415
Joel E. Cohen
References 437
Index 469


Russell Tuttle is professor of anthropology, on the Committee on Evolutionary Biology, and part of the Morris Fishbein Center for the History of Biology and Medicine at the University of Chicago. He specializes in research in the history and theory of human evolution, primate behavior, and comparative functional morphology. His contributions to the literature have appeared in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Science, Science Journal, and other publications.