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In Search of the Neanderthals: Solving the Puzzle of Human Origins New edition [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 248 pages, aukštis x plotis: 255x178 mm, weight: 620 g, 170 illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Aug-1994
  • Leidėjas: Thames & Hudson Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0500278075
  • ISBN-13: 9780500278079
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 248 pages, aukštis x plotis: 255x178 mm, weight: 620 g, 170 illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Aug-1994
  • Leidėjas: Thames & Hudson Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0500278075
  • ISBN-13: 9780500278079
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Ever since the first discovery of their bones, the Neanderthals have provoked controversy. Who were they? How were they related to modern people? What caused their disappearance 35,000 years ago? The Neanderthals have become the archetype of all that is primitive. But what is their true story? Today Neanderthal specialists are locked in one of the fiercest debates in modern science. One side, the "multiregional" school, argues that the Neanderthals and their contemporaries evolved semi-independently into modern humans. Christopher Stringer leads the "out of Africa" school, which believes that the Neanderthals were replaced by modern people from Africa. Here he sets out his views for the first time, with the archaeologist Clive Gamble. Step by step the authors put forward their case. The Neanderthals had an anatomy crucially different from our own, adapted to Ice Age Europe. Neanderthal behaviour similarly points to fundamental differences. New genetic evidence strongly suggests a single origin for modern humans in Africa. The authors argue that, capable and intelligent as the Neanderthals were, they proved no match for the better-organized, better-equipped newcomers, and died out.
Preface 7(5)
Who Were the Neanderthals?
12(27)
Introduction
12(1)
Discovering Neanderthals
13(3)
Boule's Neanderthal
16(10)
The Neanderthal image problem
26(8)
Rival theories
34(4)
Ancients and Moderns
38(1)
The Ice Age World
39(22)
Traditional Pleistocene frameworks and their problems
39(3)
The modern Pleistocene framework from deep-sea cores
42(1)
The new cycles
43(2)
Climate and environment in the Neanderthal world
45(1)
The last climate cycle: a world-wide view
46(4)
Resources in the Neanderthal world
50(4)
Dating the Palaeolithic
54(6)
Neanderthal distribution
60(1)
Neanderthal Beginnings
61(12)
African genesis
61(1)
How many early humans are there?
62(1)
Enter Homo erectus
63(1)
Out of Africa 1 and regional developments
64(1)
The origin of the Neanderthals
65(4)
Neanderthals on the scene
69(1)
Some evolutionary models
70(3)
Portrait of a Neanderthal
73(23)
The Neanderthal head and brain
74(10)
Neanderthal growth
84(7)
The shape of Neanderthal bodies
91(3)
Disease and death among the Neanderthals
94(1)
Neanderthal bodies and behaviour
95(1)
Humans at the Crossroads: The Middle East Corridor
96(27)
Tabun and Skhul
97(1)
Qafzeh and Shanidar
98(1)
Amud and Kebara
99(1)
Comparing the fossils
100(2)
New dates for old fossils
102(19)
East and west: Moderns on the move
121(2)
The Dark Continent and Beyond: The Origin of Homo Sapiens
123(20)
A continent comes of age
123(1)
Middle Pleistocene Africans
124(3)
Family relationships
127(1)
The transition to modern humans
127(2)
The first appearance of early modern humans
129(2)
Beyond the bones
131(1)
The genetic revolution in modern human origins
132(4)
New light on the dark continent
136(1)
Modern humans in the Far East and Australia
137(6)
The Archaeology of the Ancients
143(36)
The chronology of the Middle Palaeolithic
146(8)
Campsites
154(4)
Burials
158(2)
Middle Palaeolithic art and symbolic expression
160(1)
Landscape
161(4)
A regional example of Neanderthal subsistence
165(4)
Landscapes and raw materials
169(2)
Peoples in the landscape
171(5)
Expansion into New Habitats
176(3)
The Fate of the Neanderthals
179(16)
The earliest Moderns in Europe: the anthropological evidence
179(2)
The last Neanderthals
181(2)
Close encounters of a European kind
183(12)
Close Kin or Distant Relatives?
195(23)
Two popular fates for the Neanderthals
195(1)
A scientific fate
196(3)
Life at the Fireside
199(1)
The Neanderthals and the Chatelperronian
200(2)
The Moderns and the Aurignacian
202(1)
Art and symbolism
203(1)
Campsites as symbols
204(1)
Burials in the open
205(2)
Imitation and change
207(1)
Life on The Land
208(1)
The distances stone travelled
208(1)
Artifact and art styles
208(3)
Patterns of settlement
211(1)
Society and stone tools
212(2)
Expansion into New Habitats
214(2)
Did they have culture? Could they speak?
216(2)
Where did modern behaviour originate?
218(1)
Epilogue: The Lesson for Human Unity 218(3)
Appendix: Selected Absolute Dates 221(5)
Notes to the Text 226(7)
Further Reading and Bibliography 233(9)
Sources of Illustrations 242(1)
Acknowledgments 243(1)
Index 244