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The History and Geography of Human Genes
 
 

The History and Geography of Human Genes (Hardcover)

~ Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza (Author), Paolo Menozzi (Author), Alberto Piazza (Author) "For some time, geneticists had been aware of a certain amount of genetic variation among the individuals forming a species, but the remarkable extent of..." (more)
Key Phrases: anthroposcopic characters, red cell glyoxalase, cell enzyme polymorphisms, New Guinea, Middle East, South America (more...)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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The History and Geography of Human Genes + Genes, Peoples, and Languages + The Great Human Diasporas: The History Of Diversity and Evolution
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Editorial Reviews

From Scientific American

This is the most comprehensive treatment of human genetic variations available.... It will likely play an important role in future research in anthropological genetics.... An impressive display of synthesis and analysis. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


Review

This long-awaited magnum opus is a major contribution to our knowledge of human genetic variation and its distribution on a global scale. -- Review

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 1088 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (July 5, 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691087504
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691087504
  • Product Dimensions: 11.3 x 8.9 x 2.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #147,532 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #34 in  Books > Science > Medicine > Basic Science > Genetics
    #37 in  Books > Professional & Technical > Medical > Basic Sciences > Genetics
    #38 in  Books > Nonfiction > Social Sciences > Demography

Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
For some time, geneticists had been aware of a certain amount of genetic variation among the individuals forming a species, but the remarkable extent of this variation was not appreciated until about 25 years ago. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
anthroposcopic characters, red cell glyoxalase, cell enzyme polymorphisms, synthetic maps, constant evolutionary rates, individual variograms, mean gene frequencies, original genetic variation, concentric gradient, extensive general introduction, mean gene frequency, human gene frequencies, extreme drift, second fission, small subcluster, average gene frequencies, average gene frequency, demic component, serum protein polymorphisms, haptoglobin polymorphism, classical polymorphisms, initial slope, language replacement, seven principal components, negative correlation values
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New Guinea, Middle East, South America, North America, West Asia, South Africa, North Africa, West Africa, South Asia, Central America, East Africa, Near East, Iron Age, New Zealand, Easter Island, United States, American Indians, Principal Coordinate, Mbuti Pygmies, North Asia, African Pygmies, Indus Valley, Pacific Ocean, Central African Republic, Central Amerind
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4.5 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars History and Geography of Homan Genes, June 9, 2004
By Lee Mosby (Las Vegas, NV) - See all my reviews
This work, in hardback, is written with the advanced researcher in mind. The author is world famous for his pioneering efforts in identifying traits in particular traits in ethnic groups with unique genetic markers. The color plates in the index section can be helpful to those who know how to intrepret them.
It's a scholarly treatment of a highly technical subject and a thorough one as well. This is ground-breaking work collected from many samples and analyzed in detail. I think this should be required reading for college students in the field of genetic research.
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166 of 233 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent - Just don't swallow the "No Races" squid ink, May 25, 2000
Cavalli-Sforza & The Reality of Race by Steve Sailer The New York Times has hailed "Genes, Peoples, and Languages", the new book by Professor Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza, the dean of population geneticists, for "dismantling the idea of race." In the New York Review of Books, Jared Diamond salutes Cavalli-Sforza for "demolishing scientists' attempts to classify human populations into races in the same way that they classify birds and other species into races".

Cavalli-Sforza himself has written, "The classification into races has proved to be a futile exercise"; and that "The idea of race in the human species serves no purpose."

Don't believe any of this. This is merely a politically correct smoke screen that Cavalli-Sforza regularly pumps out that keeps his life's work -- identifying the myriad races of mankind and compiling their genealogies -- from being defunded by the commissars of acceptable thinking at Stanford.

What's striking is how the press falls for his squid ink, even though Cavalli-Sforza can't resist proudly putting his genetic map showing the main races of mankind right on the cover of his 1994 magnum opus, "The History and Geography of Human Genes."

(Here's also a link to Cavalli-Sforza's map on the website of molecular anthropologist Jonathan Marks, author of "Human Biodiversity," one of the few leftists acute enough to notice the spectacular contradiction between Cavalli-Sforza's boilerplate about the meaninglessness of race and the cover of his most important book.

This is Cavalli-Sforza's own description of this map that is the capstone of his half century of labor in human genetics: "The color map of the world shows very distinctly the differences that we know exist among the continents: Africans (yellow), Caucasoids (green), Mongoloids ... (purple), and Australian Aborigines (red). The map does not show well the strong Caucasoid component in northern Africa, but it does show the unity of the other Caucasoids from Europe, and in West, South, and much of Central Asia."

Basically, all his number-crunching has produced a map that looks about like what you'd get if you gave Jesse Helms a paper napkin and a box of crayons and had him draw a racial map of the world. In fact, at the global level, Cavalli-Sforza has largely confirmed the prejudices of the more worldly 19th Century imperialists. Rudyard Kipling and Cecil Rhodes could have hunkered down together and whipped up something rather like this map in honor of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.

Cavalli-Sforza's new book, "Genes, Peoples, and Languages," is a surprisingly readable updating of a series of lectures on his work that he's been giving for years. It's not at all a bad introduction to this hugely productive scientist. But to find out just how politically unpopular Cavalli-Sforza's findings really are, you need to crack open his tecnically intimidating but endlessly fascinating landmark, "The History and Geography of Human Genes." (The reaonably priced abridged version is all that you'd ever need; the $195 unabridged volume is for libraries only.) It remains the best summary of how the early humans of Africa split apart into the countless racial groups we see today.

Cavalli-Sforza's team compiled extraordinary tables depicting the "genetic distances" separating 2,000 different racial groups from each other. For example, assume the genetic distance between the English and the Danes is equal to 1.0. Then, Cavalli-Sforza has found, the separation between the English and the Italians would be about 2.5 times as large as the English-Danish difference. On this scale, the Iranians would be 9 times more distant genetically from the English than the Danish, and the Japanese 59 times greater. Finally, the gap between the English and the Bantus (the main group of sub-Saharan blacks) is 109 times as large as the distance between the English and the Danish. (The genetic distance between Japanese and Bantus is even greater.)

From these kind of tables, Cavalli-Sforza reached this general conclusion: "The most important difference in the human gene pool is clearly that between Africans and non-Africans ..." As you can imagine, this finding could get him in a bit of hot water if the campus thought police ever found out about it. So, we should certainly forgive the charade he keeps up to fool the New York Times. But, we definitely don't have to believe it.

Ultimately, what is a "race"? It is essentially a lineage, a family tree. A racial group is merely an extremely extended family that inbreeds to some extent. Thus, race is a fundamental aspect of the human condition because we are all born into families. Burying our heads in the sand and refusing to think clearly about this bedrock fact of life only makes the inevitable problems caused by race harder to overcome.

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20 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, if you can get through it..., April 6, 2005
By VenusInScorpio "Esau" (Albuquerque, NM USA) - See all my reviews
This book is very hard to get through as someone with no backing in genetics or biology, but it is very interesting, and it shows how we humans are really just like a couple thousand breeds of dogs, all slightly different, but with the same ancestor, our distant ancestor though was probably no wolf. It is interesting when they mention the little unexplainable historical abnormalities (african genes and caucasian genes in latin american indigenous populations, perhaps?) that they see in the genes of some groups of humans.

I allmost want to dedicate my life to genetics because of all the damn interesting knowledge that could be spawned from the information presented by the authors of this book. If you know anyone studying in this field, you must give them this book for christmas or something, please.

It is now my theory that human language has been the driving force behind human evolution, how often do two parents without a common language stay together 18+ years to raise a family? Just think about that, and it explains the human diaspora pretty well. Humans very rarely mate outside of their language group. You have a group of people in africa that speak the same language, then later on, two languages develop, or three or four, these people migrate off, and form a tribe, this tribe doesnt mate with other tribes because romance and love just dont work without a common language. Tribal names and language names are usually connected anyway, and this is why. When you read this book, you need to view humanity as an animal group pretty much, its very objective without any feeling. Human beings are creatures of communication, communication has driven our evolution forward. Writing started cities, before even that farming started widespread language and trading. It seems that the natural path this should take is more communication, but most people dont like to talk, fewer like to read and write, though that is our path of destiny as humans. The average american spends more money on lottery tickets every year than books. TV is far too widespread now, the love for books is dying, though civilization has allways been built upon the libraries of past civilizations, the histories of the victors.

Anyway,
The things that could be done if these scientists who wrote this book could get together to do research with the people that are at the tip of the spear in supercomputer research...

If you want to have some mental fun/anguish, then this book should be read in conjunction with 'Forbidden Archaeology' by Michael Cremo.

Try it =)

Note that this book is not made for the layman, but if you are a layman, and have a biology textbook laying around, you can get through it no problem.

Any one who is thinking of reading this book, or anyone who has should really do a bit of research on National Geographic's Genographic project that is collecting genetic information all over the world right now (the same migratory route tracing that is in this book) and building a huge database...The cool thing though is that you can send National Geographic $100, and they will send you a kit, you send a cheek swab back, and later on, they tell you everything that you ever wanted to know about your ancestors, and their migratory routes, back 60,000 years...
The database is also building daily, so the information that you will first get about your genes will get more comprehensive as time goes on, and more genetic samples are collected from 10's or 100's of thousands of people all over the planet...
Anyone who reads this book actually MUST do a google search on this National Geographic Genographic Project, right now =)
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Outdated and overly technical
This book used to be a great reference when it was first published back in 1996. A lot of water has flown under the bridges since in the field of genetics, the fastest evolving... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Demarion

4.0 out of 5 stars What I got out of this book
I learned who the people closest genetically to Basques are. The French! Makes sense the French have a a portion of Basque country in their political nation of France. Read more
Published on May 6, 2005 by Bill C.

5.0 out of 5 stars A review of everything
Cavalli-Sforza presents the nearest approximation possible to the correlation of all measurable human genes, markers and attributes. Read more
Published on June 17, 2003 by Mark Elliott

4.0 out of 5 stars Good Book, but Martel is Wrong
The book provided a great deal of information about genetic distances and the relationships between populations. However, Mr. Read more
Published on April 10, 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting, but...
In this book, a group of Italian researchers present their study of the repartition of a sample of human genetic sequences, based on data they collected between 1978 and 1986... Read more
Published on July 4, 2002 by charles__martel

5.0 out of 5 stars Wow!
This book is amazing. Everything you've ever wondered about human population groups is in this book.

Read the book for yourself and see.

Published on June 25, 2001 by Mark Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent - just don't swallow the "No Races" boilerplate
Cavalli-Sforza & The Reality of Race by Steve Sailer (www.iSteve.com)

The New York Times has hailed "Genes, Peoples, and Languages", the new book by Professor... Read more

Published on May 25, 2000 by Steve Sailer

5.0 out of 5 stars A truly *scientific* and *interdisciplinary* book
A complex subject such as Human Genetics is addressed in a very complex and laborious way, without giving room to speculation and methodological flaws where they would be most... Read more
Published on October 22, 1998

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The History and Geography of Human Genes

Much better than the egotrip supposed "genetic" book Seven Daughters of Eve by Sykes is this highly informative work by Cavalli-Sforza. Charts of all kind showing how genetically close the races and nationalities of the world are outline this book.

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