How humans evolved (Record no. 38067)
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000 -LEADER | |
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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 |
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 |
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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 |