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More About This Title The Human Fossil Record, Volume 4: Craniodental Morphology of Early Hominids (Genera Australopithecus, Paranthropus, Orrorin) and Overview
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English
- English
English
PART 1: INTRODUCTION.
Descriptive Protocol.
Descriptive Format.
Anatomical Terminology Figures.
Abbreviations.
Maps.
Layout of Entries.
PART 2: SITE ENTRIES.
Allia Bay.
Belohdelie.
Chesowanja.
Drimolen.
Fejej.
Hadar.
Kanapoi.
Koobi Fora (East Turkana, East Rudolf).
Kromdraai.
Laetoli (Laetolil, Garusi).
Lothagam.
Lukeino.
Maka.
Makapansgat.
Malema.
Olduvai Gorge.
Omo Valley, Lower (Shungura, Usno).
Peninj (Lake Natron).
Sterkfontein.
Swartkrans.
Tabarin (Tugen Hills).
Taung (Taungs).
Turkana, West (Lomekwi, Lokalalei, Nachukui).
PART 3: HOMINID CRANIODENTAL MORPHOLOGIES: AN OVERVIEW.
Introduction.
Systematic Approach to the Hominid Fossil Record.
The Family Hominidae and the Earliest Hominids.
Operational Problems in the Alpha Taxonomy of the "Early Hominids".
The "Australopiths"
Southern Africa.
Eastern Africa: The "Robusts".
Other "Australopiths".
Australopithecus Anamensis.
Australopithecus Afarensis.
"Early Homo".
The Ubiquitous Homo Erectus: Species or Grab-Bag?
Homo Erectus and Its Putative Relatives in Java.
Putative Homo Erectus in China.
Putative Homo Erectus from Africa.
Putative Homo Erectus from Europe.
Middle and Late Pleistocene Hominids of Europe.
Early Middle Pleistocene Hominids.
Homo Heidelbergensis and Its Putative Relatives.
The Neanderthals and Related Forms.
Homo Sapiens and "Archaic Homo Sapiens".
Homo Sapiens and Suggested Close Relatives.
Other Members of the "Archaic Homo Sapiens" Group from the Levant and Africa.
Coda.
Appendix.
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English
"Schwartz and Tattershall's book offers us a window on this record..." (Canadian Journal of Archaeology, Volume 30, Issue 1, 2006)
"Schwartz and Tattersall's project…is truly breathtaking in scope…a useful reference for any paleoanthropologist…get the book and make your students get it…worth the investment." (American Journal of Human Biology, March/April 2006)
"…a very worthwhile contribution to the literature on early hominids…contains a trove of information and will likely remain a very useful reference for years to come." (Journal of Anthropological Research, Winter 2005)