Human Origins and Environmental Backgrounds

Front Cover
Hidemi Ishida, Russell Tuttle, Martin Pickford, Naomichi Ogihara, Masato Nakatsukasa
Springer Science & Business Media, Oct 12, 2006 - Science - 282 pages

Advances in fossil studies relating to the origin of Homo sapiens have strengthened the hypothesis that our direct ancestors originated on the African continent. Most researchers also agree that the time when prehumans diverged from the last common ancestor was in the early part of the Late Miocene epoch.

Focus must now shift from determining the times and places of hominid origins to clarifying hominid evolutionary problems, such as the selective factors and acquisition processes of hominid bipedalism. In March of 2003, researchers from Africa, Europe, Japan and the United States convened in Kyoto for a symposium on Human Origins and Environmental Backgrounds, an interdisciplinary effort to consider these evolutionary puzzles, to report current research and to exchange thoughts towards better understanding the relationship among environmental changes, adaptive mechanisms and human origins. This book is the result of that symposium, and includes a diverse and unique set of papers on topics such as hominid evolution, dispersal and morphology, and the origins of bipedalism.

 

Contents

40 YEARS OF FOOTPRINTS IN JAPANESE
1
EVOLUTION OF THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN IN MIOCENE
26
LATE CENOZOIC MAMMALIAN BIOSTRATIGRAPHY AND FAUNAL
59
THE AGES AND GEOLOGICAL BACKGROUNDS OF MIOCENE
71
PATTERNS OF VERTICAL CLIMBING IN PRIMATES
97
FUNCTIONAL MORPHOLOGY OF THE MIDCARPAL JOINT
105
MORPHOLOGICAL ADAPTATION OF RAT FEMORA
123
THE GLUTEUS MAXIMUS
135
Masato Nakatsukasa Eishi Hirasaki and Naomichi Ogihara
156
PALEOENVIRONMENTS PALEOECOLOGY ADAPTATIONS
175
ARBOREAL ORIGIN OF BIPEDALISM
199
NEONTOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON EAST AFRICAN MIDDLE
209
ENERGETICS
225
ARE HUMAN BEINGS APES OR ARE APES PEOPLE TOO?
249
CURRENT THOUGHTS ON TERRESTRIALIZATION IN AFRICAN
259
INDEX
267

PRIMATES TRAINED FOR BIPEDAL LOCOMOTION AS A MODEL
149

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