Craig Stanford is a professor of anthropology and biological sciences at the University of Southern California, where he also directs the Jane Goodall Research Center. He has conducted field research on primate behavior in south Asia, Latin America, and East Africa. He is well known for his long-term studies of meat-eating among wild chimpanzees in Gombe, Tanzania, and of the relationship between mountain gorillas and chimpanzees in the Impenetrable Forest of Uganda. He has authored or coauthored more than 120 scientific publications. Craig has received USC’s highest teaching awards for his introductory Biological Anthropology course. In addition, he has published eleven books on primate behavior and human origins, including Significant Others (2001) and Upright (2003). He and his wife, Erin Moore, a cultural anthropologist at USC, live in South Pasadena, California, and have three children.
John Allen is a research scientist in the Dornsife Cognitive Neuroscience Imaging Center and the Brain and Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California, where he is also an adjunct research associate professor in the Department of Anthropology. Previously, he was a neuroscience researcher at the University of Iowa College of Medicine and a faculty member in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, for several years. His primary research interests are the evolution of the human brain and behavior, and behavioral disease. He also has research experience in molecular genetics, nutritional anthropology, and the history of anthropology. He has conducted fieldwork in Japan, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and Palau. He has received university awards for teaching introductory courses in biological anthropology both as a graduate student instructor at the University of California and as a faculty member at the University of Auckland. John and his wife, Stephanie Sheffield, have two sons, Reid and Perry.
Susan Antón is an associate professor in the Center for the Study of Human Origins, Department of Anthropology at New York University, where she also directs the M.A. program in Human Skeletal Biology. She is joint editor of the Journal of Human Evolution. Her field research concerns the evolution of genus Homo in Indonesia and human impact on island ecosystems in the South Pacific. She is best known for her work on H. erectus in Kenya and Indonesia. She received awards for teaching as a graduate student instructor of introductory physical anthropology and anatomy at the University of California and was Teacher of the Year while at the University of Florida. She has been twice elected to Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers. Susan and her husband, Carl Swisher, a geochronologist, raise Anatolian shepherd dogs.
Preface | p. ix |
About the Authors | p. xiii |
Foundations | |
Introduction: What Is Biological Anthropology? | p. 1 |
Anthropology and Its Other Subfields | p. 3 |
Foundation: The Subfields of Anthropology | p. 4 |
The Scope of Biological Anthropology | p. 6 |
Paleoanthropology | p. 6 |
Skeletal Biology and Human Osteology | p. 7 |
Paleopathology and Bioarchaeology | p. 8 |
Forensic Anthropology | p. 8 |
Primatology | p. 9 |
Human Biology | p. 9 |
The Roots of Modern Biological Anthropology | p. 10 |
Visual Summary | p. 12 |
Origins of Evolutionary Thought | p. 13 |
What Is Science? | p. 15 |
The Early Thinkers | p. 16 |
The Roots of Modern Science | p. 16 |
Linnaeus and the Natural Scheme of Life | p. 17 |
The Road to the Darwinian Revolution | p. 17 |
The Uniformitarians: Hutton and Lyell | p. 18 |
The Darwinian Revolution | p. 19 |
The Galápagos | p. 20 |
Refining the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection | p. 22 |
Darwin versus Wallace? | p. 25 |
The Science and Creationism Question | p. 27 |
What Is Intelligent Design? | p. 28 |
Visual Summary | p. 30 |
Mechanisms of Evolution | |
Genetics: Cells and Molecules | p. 31 |
The Study of Genetics | p. 33 |
Cloning Controversies | p. 34 |
The Cell | p. 35 |
Cell Anatomy | p. 36 |
DNA Structure and Function | p. 37 |
DNA Structure I: The Molecular Level | p. 37 |
DNA Function I: Replication | p. 39 |
DNA Function II: Protein Synthesis | p. 40 |
DNA Structure II: Chromosomes and Cell Division | p. 45 |
Molecular Tools for Bioanthropological Research | p. 50 |
Indirect and Direct Research Methods | p. 50 |
PCR, Mitochondrial DNA, and Ancient DNA | p. 51 |
Innovations: DNA Barcoding | p. 54 |
Visual Summary | p. 56 |
Genetics: From Genotype to Phenotype | p. 58 |
From Genotype to Phenotype | p. 60 |
The ABO Blood Type System | p. 61 |
Obesity: A Complex Interaction | p. 61 |
Mendelian Genetics | p. 62 |
Mendel's Postulates | p. 64 |
Linkage and Crossing Over | p. 67 |
Mutation | p. 67 |
Point Mutation and Sickle Cell Disease | p. 67 |
Trinucleotide Repeat Diseases | p. 69 |
Mutations: Bad, Neutral, and Good | p. 69 |
X-Linked Disorders | p. 70 |
Mendelian Genetics in Humans | p. 72 |
Genetics beyond Mendel | p. 72 |
State Fair Mendelism and the Eugenics Movement | p. 73 |
Polygenic Traits, the Phenotype, and the Environment | p. 75 |
Innovations: A New Genetic Era | p. 76 |
Heritability and IQ Test Score Performance | p. 77 |
Phenylketonuria: Illustrating Mendelian and Post-Mendelian Concepts | p. 77 |
Genes and Environments | p. 78 |
Visual Summary | p. 79 |
The Forces of Evolution and the Formation of Species | p. 81 |
How Evolution Works | p. 83 |
Where Does Variation Come From? | p. 83 |
How Natural Selection Works | p. 83 |
Other Evolutionary Processes | p. 85 |
Classification and Evolution | p. 89 |
Taxonomy and Speciation | p. 89 |
What Is a Species? | p. 92 |
Species Concepts | p. 92 |
What's in a Name? Species Concepts, Genetics, and Conservation | p. 93 |
Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms | p. 94 |
How Species Are Formed | p. 94 |
The Tempo of Speciation | p. 96 |
Adaptation | p. 96 |
Is Everything Adaptive? | p. 97 |
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium | p. 98 |
Levels of Selection | p. 99 |
Inclusive Fitness | p. 100 |
Visual Summary | p. 101 |
Human Variation: Evolution, Adaptation, and Adaptability | p. 102 |
Human Variation at the Individual and Group Levels | p. 104 |
What Is a Population? | p. 105 |
Historical Perspectives on Human Variation | p. 106 |
Recording Human Variation in Past Civilizations | p. 106 |
The Monogenism-Polygenism Debate | p. 107 |
Race and Racism in the Twentieth Century | p. 109 |
Changing Attitudes Toward Race in Anthropology | p. 110 |
Deconstructing Racial Features | p. 110 |
Population Genetics | p. 112 |
Polymorphisms: ABO and Other Blood Type Systems | p. 112 |
Gene Flow and Protein Polymorphisms | p. 116 |
Polymorphisms and Phylogenetic Studies | p. 117 |
Polymorphisms and Natural Selection in Human Populations | p. 119 |
The Evolution of Lactose Tolerance | p. 119 |
Balanced Polymorphisms: Sickle Cell and Other Conditions | p. 121 |
Adaptation and Adaptability | p. 125 |
Levels of Adaptability | p. 125 |
Technology and Extreme Environments | p. 126 |
Heat and Cold | p. 126 |
Body Size and Shape | p. 127 |
Living at High Altitude | p. 129 |
Skin Color | p. 130 |
Visual Summary | p. 135 |
Primates | |
The Primates | p. 136 |
The Primate Radiation | p. 138 |
The Extraordinary Diversity of Nonhuman Primates | p. 139 |
What Exactly Is a Primate? | p. 139 |
Anatomical Traits | p. 141 |
Life History Traits | p. 145 |
Behavioral Traits | p. 146 |
A Guide to the Nonhuman Primates | p. 147 |
The Strepsirhines | p. 149 |
The Haplorhines | p. 153 |
The Rarest of the Rare | p. 154 |
The New World Monkeys | p. 157 |
The Old World Monkeys | p. 158 |
The Hominoids | p. 161 |
The Impending Extinction of the Great Apes? | p. 166 |
Primate Ecology | p. 169 |
Diet | p. 169 |
You Are What You Eat: Dietary and Digestive Strategies | p. 171 |
Diet and Feeding Competition | p. 171 |
Primate Communities | p. 173 |
Visual Summary | p. 174 |
Primate Behavior | p. 175 |
Studying Primates | p. 177 |
The Evolution of Primate Social Behavior | p. 178 |
Social Behavior and Reproductive Asymmetry | p. 179 |
Male Reproductive Strategies | p. 180 |
Female Reproductive Strategies | p. 181 |
Why Are Nonhuman Primates Social? | p. 183 |
The Paradox of Sociality | p. 183 |
Innovations: Culture in Nonhuman Primates | p. 184 |
Types of Nonhuman Primate Societies | p. 187 |
The Infanticide Wars | p. 190 |
Are Chimpanzees from Mars and Bonobos from Venus? | p. 192 |
Visual Summary | p. 185 |
The Fossil Record | |
Geology and Primate Origins | p. 196 |
How to Become a Fossil | p. 198 |
The Importance of Context | p. 199 |
Stratigraphy | p. 199 |
The Geologic Time Scale | p. 201 |
How Old Is It? | p. 204 |
Relative Dating Techniques | p. 204 |
Calibrated Relative Dating Techniques | p. 207 |
The Piltdown Hoax | p. 208 |
Chronometric Dating Techniques | p. 208 |
Innovations: Time in a Bottle | p. 212 |
The Earth in the Cenozoic | p. 214 |
Continents and Landmasses | p. 214 |
The Environment in the Cenozoic | p. 215 |
Climate Change and Early Primate Evolution | p. 217 |
Changes in the Paleocene: The Origin of Primates | p. 218 |
Why Primates? | p. 219 |
Early Primates of the Eocene | p. 219 |
Selective Pressures Driving the Strepsirhine-Haplorhine Split | p. 221 |
Climate Change and the Origin of Monkeys and Apes | p. 221 |
The First Monkeys | p. 222 |
New World Monkeys | p. 223 |
Old World Monkeys | p. 224 |
What Favored the Origin of Anthropoids? | p. 225 |
The Earliest Apes | p. 226 |
Selection Pressures and the Divergence of Monkeys and Apes | p. 228 |
The Monkey's Tale: Primate Diversity in the Miocene | p. 228 |
Molecular Evolution in Primates | p. 229 |
A Primate Molecular Phylogeny | p. 232 |
Visual Summary | p. 234 |
Early Hominids and Australopithecus | p. 236 |
Becoming a Biped | p. 238 |
Anatomical Changes | p. 239 |
Constructing the Bipedal Body Plan | p. 242 |
Why Bipeds? | p. 242 |
The Transition to Human Behavior | p. 245 |
What Made Humans Human? | p. 245 |
Will You Know a Hominid When You See One? | p. 245 |
A Rose by Any Other Name: Hominids versus Hominins | p. 246 |
The First Hominids? | p. 247 |
Sahelanthropus tchadensis (7.0-6.0 mya) | p. 249 |
Orrorin tugenensis (6.0 mya) | p. 249 |
Ardipithecus ramidus (4.4 mya) and Ardipithecus kadabba (5.8-5.2 mya) | p. 250 |
Australopithecus and Kin | p. 251 |
Australopithecus anamensis (4.2-3.9 mya) | p. 254 |
Australopithecus afarensis (3.9-2.9 mya) | p. 254 |
East and West African Hominids from 3.5 to 2.5 mya | p. 256 |
Australopithecus africanus (3.5-2.0 mya) | p. 257 |
The Robust Australopithecines (or Paranthropines) | p. 260 |
Innovations: Dikika and Development | p. 262 |
Understanding the Australopithecine Radiation | p. 265 |
Cohabitation | p. 265 |
Tools and Intelligence | p. 266 |
Ancestors and Descendants | p. 266 |
Visual Summary | p. 269 |
Rise of the Genus Homo | p. 271 |
Climate and the Evolution of Homo in the Pliocene and Pleistocene | p. 272 |
Defining the Genus Homo | p. 273 |
Earliest Genus Homo | p. 273 |
Early Tool Use | p. 274 |
Hunting and Scavenging | p. 276 |
Who Was Homo erectus? | p. 277 |
Anatomical Features | p. 277 |
Innovations: What's Size Got to Do with It? | p. 282 |
Homo erectus versus Homo ergaster | p. 284 |
Homo erectus around the World | p. 284 |
African Origins | p. 285 |
The First African Diaspora: Republic of Georgia | p. 285 |
Dispersal into East Asia | p. 288 |
The Status of Homo erectus in Europe | p. 292 |
The Lifeways of Homo erectus | p. 293 |
Homo erectus and the Early Stone Age | p. 293 |
A Higher-Quality Diet: Homo erectus Subsistence | p. 295 |
Homo erectus Life History | p. 296 |
Homo erectus Leaves Africa | p. 296 |
Visual Summary | p. 298 |
Archaic Homo sapiens and Neandertals | p. 299 |
Hominid Evolution in the Mid- to Late Pleistocene | p. 301 |
Defining Anatomically Modern Homo sapiens | p. 301 |
Archaic Homo sapiens | p. 302 |
European Archaic Homo sapiens | p. 302 |
African Archaic Homo sapiens | p. 304 |
Asian Archaic Homo sapiens | p. 305 |
Behavior of Archaic Homo sapiens | p. 305 |
Stone Tools | p. 306 |
Tools from Organic Materials | p. 307 |
Big-Game Hunting | p. 307 |
Fire, Campsites, and Home Sites | p. 308 |
The Neandertals | p. 309 |
Geographic and Temporal Distribution | p. 309 |
History of Neandertal Discovery | p. 309 |
Neandertal Image Makeovers | p. 311 |
Neandertal Anatomy and DNA: Built for the Cold | p. 312 |
Growing up Neandertal | p. 316 |
Health and Disease | p. 317 |
Innovations: Neandertal Genes | p. 318 |
Neandertal Behavior | p. 320 |
Material Culture | p. 320 |
Coping with Cold | p. 322 |
Hunting, Subsistence, and Cannibalism | p. 322 |
Burials | p. 323 |
Ritual and Symbolic Behavior | p. 325 |
Phylogenetic and Taxonomic Issues: An Overview | p. 325 |
Visual Summary | p. 330 |
The Origin, Dispersal, and Bioarchaeology of Homo sapiens | p. 331 |
The Emergence of Modern Humans | p. 333 |
Models of Modern Human Origins | p. 334 |
Replacement and Multiregional Models | p. 334 |
Predictions of the Two Models | p. 335 |
Anatomy and Distribution of Early Humans | p. 335 |
Africa | p. 335 |
Near East | p. 337 |
Europe | p. 337 |
Asia and Southeast Asia | p. 338 |
Australia | p. 339 |
Archaeology of Modern Human Origins | p. 340 |
The Little People of Flores | p. 341 |
Stone and Other Tools | p. 342 |
Subsistence | p. 343 |
Symbolism, Burial, and Art | p. 344 |
Molecular Genetics and Human Origins | p. 346 |
Mitochondrial DNA | p. 346 |
The Y Chromosome | p. 347 |
MRCAs for Nuclear Genes | p. 348 |
Ancient DNA | p. 348 |
Interpreting Models of Human Origins | p. 349 |
Paleontology and Archaeology | p. 349 |
Molecular Genetics | p. 350 |
Bioarchaeology after the Origin of Modern Humans | p. 352 |
Settlement of the New World and Pacific Islands | p. 352 |
Biological Changes at the Origins of Agriculture and Shifts to Sedentism | p. 354 |
Physical and Cultural Consequences of Colonization | p. 355 |
Visual Summary | p. 357 |
Biology and Behavior of Modern Humans | |
Evolution of Brain and Behavior | p. 359 |
Overview of the Brain | p. 361 |
Issues in Hominid Brain Evolution | p. 363 |
Humans Have "Large" Brains | p. 363 |
Brain Size and the Fossil Record | p. 365 |
Brain Reorganization | p. 367 |
The Ten-Percent Myth: Evolution and Energy | p. 368 |
Language: Biology and Evolution | p. 369 |
Language in the Brain | p. 369 |
Language in the Throat | p. 370 |
Language Ability and the Fossil Record | p. 371 |
Innovations: Music, the Brain, and Evolution | p. 372 |
Scenarios of Language Evolution | p. 374 |
The Evolution of Human Behavior | p. 374 |
The Evolution of Human Behavior: Four Approaches | p. 375 |
Traditional Lives in Evolutionary Ecological Perspective | p. 376 |
Wealth, Reproductive Success, and Survival | p. 376 |
Physiology and Ecology | p. 377 |
Hunting, Gathering, and the Sexual Division of Labor | p. 379 |
Sexual Selection and Human Behavior | p. 380 |
Risk-Taking Behavior | p. 381 |
Inbreeding Avoidance and Incest Taboos | p. 382 |
Visual Summary | p. 384 |
Biomedical and Forensic Anthropology | p. 385 |
Biomedical Anthropology and the Biocultural Perspective | p. 387 |
Birth, Growth, and Aging | p. 388 |
Human Childbirth | p. 388 |
Patterns of Human Growth | p. 389 |
Stages of Human Growth | p. 390 |
The Secular Trend in Growth | p. 392 |
Menarche and Menopause | p. 393 |
Aging | p. 394 |
Infectious Disease and Biocultural Evolution | p. 396 |
Human Behavior and the Spread of Infectious Disease | p. 396 |
Infectious Disease and the Evolutionary Arms Race | p. 398 |
Diet and Disease | p. 400 |
The Paleolithic Diet | p. 400 |
Agriculture and Nutritional Deficiency | p. 400 |
Agriculture and Abundance: Thrifty and Nonthrifty Genotypes | p. 402 |
Forensic Anthropology, Life, Death, and the Skeleton | p. 403 |
Field Recovery and Laboratory Processing | p. 403 |
The Biological Profile | p. 404 |
Age at Death | p. 404 |
Sex | p. 407 |
Ancestry | p. 409 |
Height and Weight | p. 409 |
Innovations: Ancestry Genetics | p. 410 |
Premortem Injury and Disease | p. 412 |
Perimortem and Postmortem Trauma | p. 412 |
Identification and Forensic Anthropology | p. 413 |
Time Since Death | p. 414 |
Antemortem Records, Facial Reconstruction, and Positive IDs | p. 415 |
Applications of Forensic Anthropology | p. 415 |
Mass Fatalities | p. 416 |
War Dead | p. 416 |
War Crimes and Genocide | p. 417 |
Epilogue | p. 418 |
Visual Summary | p. 419 |
Primate and Human Comparative Anatomy | p. 421 |
The Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium | p. 426 |
Metric-Imperial Conversions | p. 428 |
Glossary | p. 429 |
Bibliography | p. 437 |
Credits | p. 456 |
Index | p. 458 |
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