Dental Perspectives on Human Evolution
Dental Perspectives on Human Evolution
Buch
- State of the Art Research in Dental Paleoanthropology
- Herausgeber: Jean-Jacques Hublin, Shara E. Bailey
- Springer Netherlands, 08/2007
- Einband: Gebunden, HC runder Rücken kaschiert
- Sprache: Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781402058448
- Bestellnummer: 6480515
- Umfang: 440 Seiten
- Sonstiges: XXVI, 409 p.
- Auflage: 2007
- Copyright-Jahr: 2007
- Gewicht: 1425 g
- Maße: 284 x 217 mm
- Stärke: 24 mm
- Erscheinungstermin: 20.8.2007
- Serie: Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Weitere Ausgaben von Dental Perspectives on Human Evolution
Beschreibung
The objective of the volume is to bring together, in one collection, the most innovative dental anthropological research as it pertains to the study of hominid evolution. In the past few decades both the numbers of hominid dental fossils and the sophistication of the techniques used to analyze them have increased substantially. The book s contributions focus on dental morphometrics, growth and development, diet and dental evolution.Inhaltsangabe
ForewordS. E. Bailey and J-J. Hublin
Introduction
S. Hillson
PART I. DENTAL EVOLUTION and DENTAL MORPHOLOGY
1. Introduction
S. E. Bailey2. Patterns of molar variation in great apes and their implications for hominin taxonomy
V. Pilbrow
3. Trends in postcanine occlusal morphology within the hominin clade: The case of Paranthropus
S. E. Bailey and B. A. Wood
4. Maxillary molars cusp morphology of South African australopithecines
J. Moggi-Cecchi and S. Boccone
5. Gran Dolina-TD6 and Sima de los Huesos dental samples: Preliminary approach to some dental characters of interest for phylogenetic studies
M. Martinón-Torres, J. M. Bermúdez de Castro, A. Gómez-Robles, M. Bastir, S. Sarmiento, A. Muela, and J. L. Arsuaga
6. Neural network analysis by using the Self-Organizing Maps (SOMs) applied to human fossil dental morphology: a new methodology
F. Manni, R. Vargiu, and A. Coppa
7. Micro-computed tomography of primate molars: Methodological aspects of three-dimensional data collection
A. J. Olejniczak, F. E. Grine, and L. B. Martin
8. HRXCT analysis of hominoid molars: A quantitative volumetric analysis and 3D reconstruction of coronal enamel and dentin
D. G. Gantt, J. Kappelman, R. A. Ketcham
PART II. DENTAL MICROSTRUCTURE AND LIFE HISTORY
1. Introduction
R. Macchiarelli
2. Inferring primate growth, development and life history from dental microstructure: The case of the extinct Malagasy lemur, Megaladapis
G. T. Schwartz, L. R. Godfrey, and P. Mahoney
3. Histological study of an upper incisor and molar of a bonobo (Pan paniscus) individual
F. Ramirez-Rossi and R. LaCruz
4. New perspectives on chimpanzee and human molar crown development
T. M. Smith, D. J. Reid, M. C. Dean, A. J. Olejniczak, R. J. Ferrell, and L. B. Martin
5. Portable Confocal Scanning Optical Microscopy of Australopithecus africanus enamel structure
T. G. Bromage, R. LaCruz, A. Perez-Ochoa and A. Boyde
6. Imbricational enamel formation in Neandertals and recent modern humans
D. Guatelli-Steinberg, D. J. Reid, T. A. Bishop, and C. Spencer Larsen
PART III. DENTAL DEVELOPMENT
1. Introduction
B. A. Wood
2. Of mice and monkeys: Quantitative genetic analyses of size variation along the dental arcade
L. J. Hlusko and M. C. Mahaney
3. Quantifying variation in human dental development sequences: An EVO-DEVO perspective
J. Braga and Y. Heuze
4. Dental calcification stages of the permanent M1 and M2 in U. S. children of African American and European American ancestry born in the 1990s
J. Monge, A. Mann, A. Stout, J. Rogér, and R. Wadenya
5. A computerized model for reconstruction of dental ontogeny: a new tool for studying evolutionary trends in the dentition
P. Smith, R. Müller, Y. Gabet and G. Avishai
PART IV. DENTITION AND DIET
1. Introduction
F. E. Grine
2. An evaluation of changes in strontium / calcium ratios across the neonatal line in human deciduous teeth
L. T. Humphrey, M. C. Dean and T. E. Jeffries
3. Dental topography and human evolution: With comments on the diets of Australopithecus africanus and Paranthropus robustus
P. S. Ungar
4. Dental microwear and paleoanthropology: cautions and possibilities
M. F. Teaford
5. Tooth wear and diversity in early hominid molars: a case
Klappentext
S. E. BAILEY Department of Human Evolution Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Deutscher Platz 6 D-04103 Leipzig, Germany and Center for the Study of Human Origins, Department of Anthropology, New York University, 25 Waverly Place New York, NY 10003, USA sbailey@nyu. edu J. -J. HUBLIN Department of Human Evolution Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Deutscher Platz 6 D-04103 Leipzig, Germany hublin@eva. mpg. de When faced with choosing a topic to as teeth represent, by far, the most abundant be the focus of the first symposium material documenting different species of in Human Evolution at the Max Planck extinct non-human primates and hominins. As Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in such, much of what we know about non- Leipzig, a paleoanthropological perspective human primate and hominin evolution is based of dental anthropology was a natural choice. on teeth. Teeth make up a disproportionate number Teeth have been a focus of interest for of the fossils discovered. They represent physical anthropologists over many gen- strongly mineralized organs of compact shape, ations. Teeth provide a multitude of which allow better preservation in geological information about humans including deposits and archaeological sites than any cultural treatment, pathology, morphological other part of the skeleton. As a result, variation, and development. The presence of since the discoveries of the first fossils of culturally induced wear (toothpick grooves, extinct species, vertebrate paleontology has for example) reveals something about what been built primarily on analyses of teeth.Dental Perspectives on Human Evolution
EUR 120,46*