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Shaping Primate Evolution (Cambridge Studies in Biological & Evolutionary Anthropology No.40) 442 pages - hardback Cambridge University Press - (isbn 0-521-81107-4) May. 2004 |
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| Price: |
119,70 EUR
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| Series Editor: |
Mascie-Taylor, C.G.Nicholas / Foley, R.A. / Jablonski, Nina
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| Editor: |
Anapol,
Fred (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee) / German, Rebecca Z.
(University of Cincinnati) / Jablonski, Nina G. (California Academy of
Sciences, San Francisco)
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| Description: |
Shaping
Primate Evolution is an edited collection of state-of-the-art papers
about how biological form is described in primate biology, and the
consequences of form for function and behavior. The contributors are
highly regarded internationally recognized scholars in the field of
quantitative primate evolutionary morphology. Each chapter elaborates
upon the analysis of the form-function-behavior triad in a unique and
compelling way. This book is distinctive not only in the diversity of
the topics discussed, but also in the range of levels of biological
organization that are addressed from cellular morphometrics to the
evolution of primate ecology. The book is dedicated to Charles E.
Oxnard, whose influential pioneering work on innovative metric and
analytic techniques has gone hand-in-hand with meticulous comparative
functional analyses of primate anatomy. Through the marriage of theory
with analytical applications, this volume will be an important
reference work for all those interested in primate functional
morphology.
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| Contents List: |
Preface
- shaping primate evolution Fred Anapol, Rebecca Z. German and Nina G.
Jablonski; 1. Introduction - Charles Oxnard: an appreciation Matt
Cartmill; Part I. Craniofacial Form and Variation: 2. The ontogeny of
sexual dimorphism Rebecca Z. German; 3. Advances in the analysis of
form and pattern Paul O'Higgins and Ruilang L. Pan; 4. Cranial
variation among the Asian Colobines Ruilang L. Pan and Colin P. Groves;
5. Craniometric variation in Early Homo compared to Modern Gorillas
Joseph M. A. Miller, Gene H. Albrecht and Bruce Gelvin; Part II. Organ
Structure, Function and Behavior: 6. Fiber architecture, muscle
function and behavior Fred Anapol, Nazima Shahnoor and J. Patrick Gray;
7. Comparative fiber type composition and size in the antigravity
muscles of primate limbs Francoise K. Jouffroy and Monique F. Medina;
8. On the nature of morphology Robert S. Kidd; 9. Plant mechanics and
primate dental adaptations Peter W. Lucas; 10. Convergent evolution in
brain 'shape' and locomotion in primates Willem de Winter; Part III. In
Vivo Organismal Verification of Functional Models: 11. Jaw adductor
force and symphyseal fusion William L. Hylander, Christopher J.
Vinyard, Matthew J. Ravosa, Callum F. Ross, Christine E. Wall and Kirk
R. Johnson; 12. Hind limb drive, hind limb steering? Functional
differences between fore and hind limbs in chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes)
quadrupedalism Yu Li, Robin H. Crompton, Weijie Wang, Russell Savage
and Michael M. Gunther; Part IV. Theoretical Models in Evolutionary
Ecology: 13. Becoming bipedal Nina G. Jablonski and George Chaplin; 14.
Modelling human walking as an inverted pendulum of varying length Jack
T. Stern Jr, Brigitte Demes and D. Casey Kerrigan; 15. Estimating the
line-of-action of posteriorly inclined resultant jaw muscle forces in
mammals using a model that minimizes functionally important distances
in the skull Walter S. Greaves; Part V. Primate Diversity and
Evolution: 16. The evolution of primate ecology John G. Fleagle and
Kaye E. Reed; 17. Charles Oxnard and the aye-aye: morphometrics,
cladistics and two very special primates Colin P. Groves; 18. From
'Mathematical Dissection of Anatomies' to morphometrics Fred L.
Bookstein and F. James Rohlf; 19. Design, level, interface and
complexity: morphometric interpretation revisited Charles E. Oxnard;
20. Postscript and acknowledgements Charles E. Oxnard.
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| Illustrations etc.: |
97 diagrams, 39 tables, 9halftones
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| Weight: | 840 g | |||||||
| Dimensions: | 235 x 156 | |||||||
| Publisher: | Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing) | |||||||
| Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing) | ||||||||