How humans evolved (Record no. 38067)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 07748cam a2200205 a 4500
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
ISBN 9780393974775
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
ISBN 0393974774
082 00 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 573.2
Item number BOY
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--AUTHOR NAME
Personal name Boyd, Robert,
245 10 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title How humans evolved
250 ## - EDITION STATEMENT
Edition statement 2nd ed.
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication New York :
Name of publisher W.W. Norton,
Year of publication c2000.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Number of Pages 1 v. (various pagings) :
Other physical details ill. (some col.), col. maps ;
Accompanying material 1 computer laser optical disc (4 3/4 in.)
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note Included Index and glossary
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note How Evolution Works --<br/>Adaptation by Natural Selection --<br/>Explaining Adaptation before Darwin --<br/>Darwin's Theory of Adaptation --<br/>Darwin's Postulates --<br/>An Example of Adaptation by Natural Selection --<br/>Individual Selection --<br/>The Evolution of Complex Adaptations --<br/>Why Small Variations Are Important --<br/>Why Intermediate Steps Are Favored by Selection --<br/>Rates of Evolutionary Change --<br/>Darwin's Difficulties Explaining Variation --<br/>Genetics --<br/>Mendelian Genetics --<br/>Cell Division and the Role of Chromosomes in Inheritance --<br/>Mitosis and Meiosis --<br/>Chromosomes and Mendel's Experimental Results --<br/>Linkage and Recombination --<br/>Molecular Genetics --<br/>Genes Are DNA --<br/>The Chemical Basis of Life --<br/>DNA Codes for Protein --<br/>Not All DNA Codes for Proteins --<br/>The Modern Synthesis --<br/>Population Genetics --<br/>Genes in Populations --<br/>How Random Mating and Sexual Reproduction Change Genotypic Frequencies --<br/>How Natural Selection Changes Gene Frequencies --<br/>The Modern Synthesis --<br/>The Genetics of Continuous Variation --<br/>How Variation Is Maintained --<br/>Natural Selection and Behavior --<br/>Constraints on Adaptation --<br/>Correlated Characters --<br/>Disequilibrium --<br/>Genetic Drift --<br/>Local versus Optimal Adaptations --<br/>Other Constraints on Evolution --<br/>Speciation and Phylogeny --<br/>What Are Species? --<br/>The Biological Species Concept --<br/>The Ecological Species Concept --<br/>The Origin of Species --<br/>Allopatric Speciation --<br/>Parapatric and Sympatric Speciation --<br/>The Tree of Life --<br/>Why Reconstruct Phylogenies? --<br/>How to Reconstruct Phylogenies --<br/>Problems Due to Convergence --<br/>Problems Due to Ancestral Characters --<br/>Reconstructing Phylogenies Using Genetic Distance Data --<br/>Taxonomy --<br/>Naming Names --<br/>Primate Ecology and Behavior --<br/>Introduction to the Primates --<br/>Two Reasons to Study the Primates --<br/>Primates Are Our Closest Relatives --<br/>Primates Are a Diverse Order --<br/>Features That Define the Primates --<br/>Primate Biogeography --<br/>A Taxonomy of Living Primates --<br/>The Prosimians --<br/>The Anthropoids --<br/>Primate Conservation --<br/>Primate Ecology --<br/>The Distribution of Food --<br/>Activity Patterns --<br/>Ranging Behavior --<br/>Predation --<br/>Primate Mating Systems --<br/>The Language of Adaptive Explanations --<br/>The Evolution of Reproductive Strategies --<br/>Reproductive Strategies of Primate Females --<br/>Female Dominance Hierarchies --<br/>Reproductive Tradeoffs --<br/>Primate Sociality --<br/>Why Do Primates Live in Groups? --<br/>How Big Should Groups Be? --<br/>What Kinds of Groups Should Primates Form? --<br/>Sexual Selection and Male Mating Strategies --<br/>Intrasexual Selection in Primates --<br/>Intersexual Selection in Primates --<br/>Sexual Selection and Primate Behavior --<br/>Monogamous Males --<br/>One-Male, Multifemale Groups --<br/>Multimale, Multifemale Groups --<br/>The Evolution of Social Behavior --<br/>Kinds of Social Interactions --<br/>Altruism: A Conundrum --<br/>Kin Selection --<br/>Hamilton's Rule --<br/>Evidence of Kin Selection in Primates --<br/>Reciprocal Altruism --<br/>Primate Intelligence --<br/>What Is Intelligence? --<br/>Why Are Primates So Smart? --<br/>Hypotheses Explaining Primate Intelligence --<br/>Testing Models of the Evolution of Intelligence --<br/>The Value of Studying Primate Behavior --<br/>The History of the Human Lineage --<br/>From Tree Shrew to Ape --<br/>Continental Drift and Climate Change --<br/>The Methods of Paleontology --<br/>The Evolution of the Early Primates --<br/>The First Anthropoids --<br/>The Emergence of the Hominoids --<br/>The Earliest Hominids --<br/>Australopithecus afarensis --<br/>Morphology --<br/>Bipedal Locomotion --<br/>Other Features of A. afarensis --<br/>When Is a Hominoid Also a Hominid? --<br/>Hominids before A. afarensis --<br/>Australopithecines after A. afarensis --<br/>A. africanus --<br/>Robust Australopithecines --<br/>Early Homo --<br/>Traits Defining Early Homo --<br/>How Many Species? --<br/>Flaked Stone Tools --<br/>Hominid Phylogenies --<br/>Before the Discovery of WT 17000 --<br/>After the Discovery of WT 17000 --<br/>The Lives of Early Hominids --<br/>From Ape to Human --<br/>Early Hominid Environments --<br/>Early Hominid Ecology --<br/>The Emergence of Meat Eating --<br/>Why Meat Eating Is Important --<br/>Comparison with Hunting in Chimpanzees --<br/>Seasonality and Meat Eating --<br/>Archaeological Evidence in Early Hominids --<br/>Hunters or Scavengers? --<br/>Early Hominid Social Organization --<br/>Sexual Division of Labor --<br/>Food Sharing --<br/>Archaeological Evidence --<br/>The Ancients --<br/>Homo erectus --<br/>Acheulean Tools --<br/>H. erectus Peoples the World --<br/>Cultural Adaptations of H. erectus --<br/>Middle Pleistocene Hominids: Archaic Homo sapiens --<br/>Upper Pleistocene Hominids: Neanderthals and Their Contemporaries --<br/>Mousterian and Middle Stone Age Tools --<br/>Neanderthal Lifeways --<br/>The Moderns --<br/>The Emergence of Anatomically Modern People --<br/>The Upper Paleolithic --<br/>the Human Revolution --<br/>Technology and Culture --<br/>Symbolic Behavior --<br/>Subsistence and Social Organization --<br/>Models for the Origin and Spread of Anatomically Modern Humans --<br/>Evidence from Fossils and Tool Kits --<br/>Genetic Data --<br/>The Evolution of Language --<br/>Language Is an Adaptation --<br/>Speech Production and Perception --<br/>Grammar --<br/>Language Capacities Are Derived --<br/>How Language Evolved --<br/>When Language Evolved --<br/>Did Language Arise Early? --<br/>Did Language Arise Late? --<br/>Evolution and Modern Humans --<br/>Human Genetic Diversity --<br/>Explaining Human Variation --<br/>Variation in Traits Influenced by Single Genes --<br/>Causes of Genetic Variation within Groups --<br/>Causes of Genetic Variation among Groups --<br/>Variation in Complex Phenotypic Traits --<br/>Genetic Variation within Groups --<br/>Genetic Variation among Groups --<br/>The Race Concept --<br/>Evolution and the Human Life Cycle --<br/>Maternal-Fetal Conflict during Pregnancy --<br/>Why There Is Parent-Offspring Conflict --<br/>Spontaneous Abortion --<br/>Blood Sugar --<br/>The Evolution of Senescence --<br/>Two Evolutionary Theories of Senescence --<br/>Evidence for the Theories --<br/>The Evolution of Menopause --<br/>Evolution and Human Behavior --<br/>Why Evolution Is Relevant to Human Behavior --<br/>Evolutionary Psychology --<br/>The Logic of Evolutionary Psychology --<br/>Reasoning about Reciprocity --<br/>Evolutionary Psychology and Human Universals --<br/>Color Terms --<br/>Inbreeding Avoidance --<br/>Evolution and Human Culture --<br/>Culture Is a Derived Trait in Humans --<br/>Culture Is an Adaptation --<br/>Human Behavioral Ecology --<br/>Human Mate Choice and Parenting --<br/>The Psychology of Human Mate Preferences --<br/>Some Social Consequences of Mate Preferences --<br/>Kipsigis Bridewealth --<br/>Nyinba Polyandry --<br/>Raising Children --<br/>Child Abuse and Infanticide --<br/>Cross-Cultural Patterns of Infanticide --<br/>Child Abuse in the United States and Canada --<br/>Adoption --<br/>Adoption in Oceania --<br/>Adoption in Industrialized Societies --<br/>Family Size --<br/>Is Human Evolution Over? --<br/>Epilogue: There Is Grandeur in this View of Life --<br/>The Skeletal Anatomy of Primates.
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc <br/>This is a compelling account of the evolution of the human species. This successful introductory text shows how an understanding of evolutionary theory and a knowledge of primate behavioral ecology can be combined with clues from the fossil and archaeological records to explain why we look and act the way we do.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical Term Human evolution.
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Silk, Joan B.
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Koha item type Reference Books
Holdings
Collection code Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Source of acquisition Cost, normal purchase price Full call number Accession Number Koha item type
Reference Main Library Main Library Reference 15/10/2003 Asia Foundation 1500.00 573.2 BOY 008013 Reference Books
Reference Main Library Main Library Stacks 15/10/2003 Asia Foundation 1500.00 573.2 BOY 008012 Lending Books

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