vendredi 19 avril 2019

Exploring Biological Anthropology: The Essentials, 2nd Edition PDF Manual Solutions

Exploring Biological Anthropology: The Essentials, 2nd Edition

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Category : Higher Education

Table of Contents

Preface  ix

About the Authors  xiii

 

Part I  Foundations

 

Chapter 1  Introduction: What Is Biological Anthropology?  1

Anthropology and Its Other Subfields  3

BOX 1.1 Foundation: The Subfields of Anthropology  4

The Scope of Biological Anthropology  6

Paleoanthropology  6

Skeletal Biology and Human Osteology  7

Paleopathology and Bioarchaeology  8

Forensic Anthropology  8

Primatology  9

Human Biology  9

The Roots of Modern Biological Anthropology  10

Visual Summary   12

 

Chapter 2  Origins of Evolutionary Thought  13

What Is Science?  15

The Early Thinkers  16

The Roots of Modern Science  16

Linnaeus and the Natural Scheme of Life  17

The Road to the Darwinian Revolution  17

The Uniformitarians: Hutton and Lyell  18

The Darwinian Revolution  19

The Galápagos  20

Refining the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection  22

BOX 2.1 Darwin versus Wallace?  25

The Science and Creationism Question  27

BOX 2.2 What Is Intelligent Design?  28

Visual Summary   30

 

Part II  Mechanisms of Evolution

 

Chapter 3  Genetics: Cells and Molecules  31

The Study of Genetics  33

BOX 3.1 Cloning Controversies  34

The Cell  35

Cell Anatomy  36

DNA Structure and Function  37

DNA Structure I: The Molecular Level  37

DNA Function I: Replication  39

DNA Function II: Protein Synthesis  40

DNA Structure II: Chromosomes and Cell Division  45

Molecular Tools for Bioanthropological Research  50

Indirect and Direct Research Methods  50

PCR, Mitochondrial DNA, and Ancient DNA  51

Innovations: DNA Barcoding  54

Visual Summary  56

 

Chapter 4  Genetics: From Genotype to Phenotype  58

From Genotype to Phenotype  60

The ABO Blood Type System  61

Obesity: A Complex Interaction  61

Mendelian Genetics  62

Mendel’s Postulates  64

Linkage and Crossing Over  67

Mutation  67

Point Mutation and Sickle Cell Disease  67

Trinucleotide Repeat Diseases  69

Mutations: Bad, Neutral, and Good  69

X-Linked Disorders  70

Mendelian Genetics in Humans  72

Genetics beyond Mendel  72

BOX 4.1 State Fair Mendelism and the Eugenics Movement  73

Polygenic Traits, the Phenotype, and the Environment  75

Innovations: A New Genetic Era  76

Heritability and IQ Test Score Performance  77

Phenylketonuria: Illustrating Mendelian and Post-Mendelian Concepts  77

Genes and Environments  78

Visual Summary  79

 

Chapter 5  The Forces of Evolution and the Formation of Species  81

How Evolution Works  83

Where Does Variation Come From?  83

How Natural Selection Works  83

Other Evolutionary Processes  85

Classification and Evolution  89

Taxonomy and Speciation  89

What Is a Species?  92

Species Concepts  92

BOX 5.1 What’s in a Name? Species Concepts, Genetics, and Conservation  93

Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms  94

How Species Are Formed  94

The Tempo of Speciation  96

Adaptation  96

Is Everything Adaptive?  97

Hardy—Weinberg Equilibrium  98

Levels of Selection  99

Inclusive Fitness  100

Visual Summary  101

 

Chapter 6  Human Variation: Evolution, Adaptation, and Adaptability  102

Human Variation at the Individual and Group Levels  104

What Is a Population?  105

Historical Perspectives on Human Variation  106

Recording Human Variation in Past Civilizations  106

The Monogenism—Polygenism Debate  107

Race and Racism in the Twentieth Century  109

Changing Attitudes Toward Race in Anthropology  110

Deconstructing Racial Features  110

Population Genetics  112

Polymorphisms: ABO and Other Blood Type Systems  112

Gene Flow and Protein Polymorphisms  116

Polymorphisms and Phylogenetic Studies  117

Polymorphisms and Natural Selection in Human Populations  119

The Evolution of Lactose Tolerance  119

Balanced Polymorphisms: Sickle Cell and Other Conditions  121

Adaptation and Adaptability  125

Levels of Adaptability  125

BOX 6.1 Technology and Extreme Environments  126

Heat and Cold  126

Body Size and Shape  127

Living at High Altitude  129

Skin Color  130

Visual Summary  135

 

Part III  Primates

 

Chapter 7  The Primates  136

The Primate Radiation  138

The Extraordinary Diversity of Nonhuman Primates  139

What Exactly Is a Primate?  139

Anatomical Traits  141

Life History Traits  145

Behavioral Traits  146

A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates  147

The Strepsirhines  149

The Haplorhines  153

BOX 7.1 The Rarest of the Rare  154

The New World Monkeys  157

The Old World Monkeys  158

The Hominoids  161

BOX 7.2 The Impending Extinction of the Great Apes?  166

Primate Ecology  169

Diet  169

You Are What You Eat: Dietary and Digestive Strategies  171

Diet and Feeding Competition  171

Primate Communities  173

Visual Summary  174

 

Chapter 8  Primate Behavior  175

Studying Primates  177

The Evolution of Primate Social Behavior  178

Social Behavior and Reproductive Asymmetry  179

Male Reproductive Strategies  180

Female Reproductive Strategies  181

Why Are Nonhuman Primates Social?  183

The Paradox of Sociality  183

Innovations: Culture in Nonhuman Primates  184

Types of Nonhuman Primate Societies  187

BOX 8.1 The Infanticide Wars  190

BOX 8.2 Are Chimpanzees from Mars and Bonobos from Venus?  192

Visual Summary  185

 

Part IV  The Fossil Record

 

Chapter 9  Geology and Primate Origins  196

How to Become a Fossil  198

The Importance of Context  199

Stratigraphy  199

The Geologic Time Scale  201

How Old Is It?  204

Relative Dating Techniques  204

Calibrated Relative Dating Techniques  207

BOX 9.1 The Piltdown Hoax  208

Chronometric Dating Techniques  208

Innovations: Time in a Bottle  212

The Earth in the Cenozoic  214

Continents and Landmasses  214

The Environment in the Cenozoic  215

Climate Change and Early Primate Evolution  217

Changes in the Paleocene: The Origin of Primates  218

Why Primates?  219

Early Primates of the Eocene  219

Selective Pressures Driving the Strepsirhine—Haplorhine Split  221

Climate Change and the Origin of Monkeys and Apes  221

The First Monkeys  222

New World Monkeys  223

Old World Monkeys  224

What Favored the Origin of Anthropoids?  225

The Earliest Apes  226

Selection Pressures and the Divergence of Monkeys and Apes  228

The Monkey’s Tale: Primate Diversity in the Miocene  228

Molecular Evolution in Primates  229

A Primate Molecular Phylogeny  232

Visual Summary  234

 

Chapter 10  Early Hominids and Australopithecus  236

Becoming a Biped  238

Anatomical Changes  239

Constructing the Bipedal Body Plan  242

Why Bipeds?  242

The Transition to Human Behavior  245

What Made Humans Human?  245

Will You Know a Hominid When You See One?  245

BOX 10.1 A Rose by Any Other Name: Hominids versus Hominins  246

The First Hominids?  247

Sahelanthropus tchadensis (7.0—6.0 mya)  249

Orrorin tugenensis (6.0 mya)  249

Ardipithecus ramidus (4.4 mya) and Ardipithecus kadabba (5.8—5.2 mya)  250

Australopithecus and Kin  251

Australopithecus anamensis (4.2—3.9 mya)  254

Australopithecus afarensis (3.9—2.9 mya)  254

East and West African Hominids from 3.5 to 2.5 mya  256

Australopithecus africanus (3.5—<2.0 mya)  257

The Robust Australopithecines (or Paranthropines)  260

Innovations: Dikika and Development  262

Understanding the Australopithecine Radiation  265

Cohabitation  265

Tools and Intelligence  266

Ancestors and Descendants  266

Visual Summary  269

 

Chapter 11  Rise of the Genus Homo  271

Climate and the Evolution of Homo in the Pliocene and Pleistocene  272

Defining the Genus Homo  273

Earliest Genus Homo  273

Early Tool Use  274

Hunting and Scavenging  276

Who Was Homo erectus?  277

Anatomical Features  277

Innovations: What’s Size Got to Do with It?  282

Homo erectus versus Homo ergaster  284

Homo erectus around the World  284

African Origins  285

The First African Diaspora: Republic of Georgia  285

Dispersal into East Asia  288

The Status of Homo erectus in Europe  292

The Lifeways of Homo erectus  293

Homo erectus and the Early Stone Age  293

A Higher-Quality Diet: Homo erectus Subsistence  295

Homo erectus Life History  296

Homo erectus Leaves Africa  296

Visual Summary  298

 

Chapter 12  Archaic Homo sapiens and Neandertals  299

Hominid Evolution in the Mid- to Late Pleistocene  301

Defining Anatomically Modern Homo sapiens  301

Archaic Homo sapiens  302

European Archaic Homo sapiens  302

African Archaic Homo sapiens  304

Asian Archaic Homo sapiens  305

Behavior of Archaic Homo sapiens  305

Stone Tools  306

Tools from Organic Materials  307

Big-Game Hunting  307

Fire, Campsites, and Home Sites  308

The Neandertals  309

Geographic and Temporal Distribution  309

History of Neandertal Discovery  309

BOX 12.1 Neandertal Image Makeovers  311

Neandertal Anatomy and DNA: Built for the Cold  312

Growing up Neandertal  316

Health and Disease  317

Innovations: Neandertal Genes  318

Neandertal Behavior  320

Material Culture  320

Coping with Cold  322

Hunting, Subsistence, and Cannibalism  322

Burials  323

Ritual and Symbolic Behavior  325

Phylogenetic and Taxonomic Issues: An Overview   325

Visual Summary  330

 

Chapter 13  The Origin, Dispersal, and Bioarchaeology of Homo sapiens  331

The Emergence of Modern Humans  333

Models of Modern Human Origins  334

Replacement and Multiregional Models  334

Predictions of the Two Models  335

Anatomy and Distribution of Early Humans  335

Africa  335

Near East  337

Europe  337

Asia and Southeast Asia  338

Australia  339

Archaeology of Modern Human Origins  340

BOX 13.1 The Little People of Flores  341

Stone and Other Tools  342

Subsistence  343

Symbolism, Burial, and Art  344

Molecular Genetics and Human Origins  346

Mitochondrial DNA  346

The Y Chromosome  347

MRCAs for Nuclear Genes  348

Ancient DNA  348

Interpreting Models of Human Origins  349

Paleontology and Archaeology  349

Molecular Genetics  350

Bioarchaeology after the Origin of Modern Humans  352

Settlement of the New World and Pacific Islands  352

Biological Changes at the Origins of Agriculture and Shifts to Sedentism  354

Physical and Cultural Consequences of Colonization  355

Visual Summary  357

 

Part V  Biology and Behavior of Modern Humans

 

Chapter 14  Evolution of Brain and Behavior  359

Overview of the Brain  361

Issues in Hominid Brain Evolution  363

Humans Have “Large” Brains  363

Brain Size and the Fossil Record  365

Brain Reorganization  367

BOX 14.1 The Ten-Percent Myth: Evolution and Energy  368

Language: Biology and Evolution  369

Language in the Brain  369

Language in the Throat  370

Language Ability and the Fossil Record  371

Innovations: Music, the Brain, and Evolution  372

Scenarios of Language Evolution  374

The Evolution of Human Behavior  374

The Evolution of Human Behavior: Four Approaches  375

Traditional Lives in Evolutionary Ecological Perspective  376

Wealth, Reproductive Success, and Survival  376

Physiology and Ecology  377

Hunting, Gathering, and the Sexual Division of Labor  379

Sexual Selection and Human Behavior  380

Risk-Taking Behavior  381

Inbreeding Avoidance and Incest Taboos  382

Visual Summary  384

 

Chapter 15  Biomedical and Forensic Anthropology  385

Biomedical Anthropology and the Biocultural Perspective  387

Birth, Growth, and Aging  388

Human Childbirth  388

Patterns of Human Growth  389

Stages of Human Growth  390

The Secular Trend in Growth  392

Menarche and Menopause  393

Aging  394

Infectious Disease and Biocultural Evolution  396

Human Behavior and the Spread of Infectious Disease  396

Infectious Disease and the Evolutionary Arms Race  398

Diet and Disease  400

The Paleolithic Diet  400

Agriculture and Nutritional Deficiency  400

Agriculture and Abundance: Thrifty and Nonthrifty Genotypes  402

Forensic Anthropology, Life, Death, and the Skeleton  403

Field Recovery and Laboratory Processing  403

The Biological Profile  404

Age at Death  404

Sex  407

Ancestry  409

Height and Weight  409

Innovations: Ancestry Genetics  410

Premortem Injury and Disease  412

Perimortem and Postmortem Trauma  412

Identification and Forensic Anthropology  413

Time Since Death  414

Antemortem Records, Facial Reconstruction, and Positive IDs  415

Applications of Forensic Anthropology  415

Mass Fatalities  416

War Dead  416

War Crimes and Genocide  417

Epilogue  418

Visual Summary  419

 

Appendix A    Primate and Human Comparative Anatomy  421

Appendix B    The Hardy—Weinberg Equilibrium  426

Appendix C    Metric—Imperial Conversions  428

Glossary  429

Bibliography  437

Credits  456

Index  458

***THIS IS NOT THE ACTUAL BOOK. YOU ARE BUYING the Test Bank in e-version of the following book***

INSTANAT DOWNLOAD Exploring Biological Anthropology: The Essentials, 2nd Edition by Craig Stanford, University of Southern California John S. Allen, University of Southern California Susan C. Antón, New York University PDF Manual Solutions

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