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From Biped to Strider The Emergence of Modern Human Walking, Running, and Resource Transport
Titre:
From Biped to Strider The Emergence of Modern Human Walking, Running, and Resource Transport
ISBN (Numéro international normalisé des livres):
9781441989659
Edition:
1st ed. 2004.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 2004.
Description physique:
XIII, 213 p. online resource.
Table des matières:
1 Striders, Runners, and Transporters -- 2 Knuckle-Walking and the Origin of Human Bipedalism -- 3 A New Hypothesis on the Origin of Hominoid Locomotion -- 4 Functional Interpretation of the Laetoli Footprints -- 5 Fossilized Hawaiian Footprints Compared with Laetoli Hominid Footprints -- 6 In What Manner Did They Walk on Two Legs? An Architectural Perspective for the Functional Diagnostics of the Early Hominid Foot -- 7 The Behavioral Ecology of Locomotion -- 8 Bipedalism in Homo ergaster: An Experimental Study of the Effects of Tibial Proportions on Locomotor Biomechanics -- 9 The Running-Fighting Dichotomy and the Evolution of Aggression in Hominids -- 10 Age, Sex, and Resource Transport in Venezuelan Foragers -- 11 Mobility and the Locomotor Skeleton at the Foraging to Farming Transition -- 12 Uplifted Head, Free Hands, and the Evolution of Human Walking.
Extrait:
The inspiration for this volume of contributed papers stemmed from conversations between the editors in front of Chuck Hilton's poster on the determinants of hominid walking speed, presented at thel998 meetings of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists (AAPA). Earlier at those meetings, Jeff Meldrum (with Roshna Wunderlich) had presented an alternate interpretation of the Laetoli footprints based on evidence of midfoot flexibility. As the discussion ensued we found convergence on a number of ideas about the nature of the evolution of modem human walking. From the continuation of that dialogue grew the proposal for a symposium which we called From Biped to Strider: the Emergence of Modem Human Walking. The symposium was held as a session of the 69th annual meeting of the AAPA, held in San Antonio, Texas in 2000. It seemed to us that the study of human bipedalism had become overshadowed by theoften polarized debates over whether australo­ pithecines were wholly terrestrial in habit, or retained a significant degree of arboreality.
Auteur collectif ajouté:
Langue:
Anglais