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Development, Growth and Evolution, Volume 20: Implications for the Study of the Hominid Skeleton (Linnean Society Symposium)
 
 
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Development, Growth and Evolution, Volume 20: Implications for the Study of the Hominid Skeleton (Linnean Society Symposium) [Hardcover]

Paul O'Higgins (Editor), Martin J. Cohn (Editor)

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Book Description

April 19, 2000 0125249659 978-0125249652 1
This book presents a synthesis of the modern approaches to the study of ontogeny and the interpretation of the fossil evidence for human origins. Recent years have seen significant developments in the understanding of the regulation of embryonic pattern formation and skeletal adaptation, and in techniques for the visualizations and analysis of ontogenetic transformations, offering the prospect of understanding the mechanisms underpinning phylogenetic transformation in the skeleton. Advances in developmental biology, molecular genetics, biomechanics, microscopy, imaging and morphometrics are brought to bear on the subject.

Key Features
* Reviews important hot subject areas
* Juxtaposes contributions by developmental biologists and those by evolutionary morphologists
* Makes some bold insights; synthesizes development and evolution

Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book is an important step in the process of improving the efficacy of methods for the reconstruction of higher primate evolution. The authors are to be congratulated on their efforts."
--Bernard Wood in JOURNAL OF ANATOMY (2001)
"...for those in the earlier stages of their paleoanthropological careers mastery of all the material covered here is going to be essential."
--David Pilbean, Harvard University, in JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION (2001)

From the Back Cover

This book arises out of a joint meeting of the Centre for Ecology and Evolution and the Linnean Society of London held at the meeting rooms of the Linnean Society in April 1998. The meeting brought together developmental biologists and hominid palaentologists to discuss how advances in understanding of developmental mechanisms might impact on the interpretation of hominid skeletal remains. This volume attempts to provide accessible accounts of these advances in developmental biology for the non-expert, together with contributions from hominid palaentologists, which aim to bring this developmental perspective to bear on interpretation of the skeletal record of human evolution. This combined approach is, as yet, in its infancy but it is likely that it will impact significantly on palaeoanthropology and palaentology in general. This text is therefore, likely to be of interest to students of hominid skeletal evolution, skeletal biology and evolutionary developmental biology, and its content should simulate studies in which skeletal morphology is interpreted in an integrative context, taking account of both ontogeny and phylogeny.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The vertebrate limb is a powerful model system for studying the cellular and molecular interactions that determine morphological pattern during embryonic development. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
midfacial length, sphenoid length, browridge size, growth allometrv, cuspal enamel, anterior cranial base length, midfacial projection, flank cells, polarising region, embryonic mouse tooth germs, large browridges, browridge development, germ initiation, dental stage, follistatin expression, incremental markings, daily secretion rates, skull morphogenesis, apical ridge, centroid size, early tooth development, maximum cranial length, polarising activity, inner enamel epithelium, secrete enamel
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Nature Genetics, Academic Press, Cambridge University Press, University of Chicago Press, Archives of Oral Biology, Current Biology, Journal of Anatomy, Oxford University Press, Boca Raton, Human Biology, Springer Verlag, American Journal of Orthodontics, Anatomical Record, Hong Kong, Journal of Morphology, South Africa, Systematic Zoology, University of Western Australia, Broken Hill, Folia Primatologica, Investigative Radiology, Journal of Dental Research, San Diego, Acta Zoologica
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