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Lowly origin
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Lowly origin

Lowly origin

Where, when, and why our ancestors first stood up

Jonathan Kingdon

410 pages, parution le 23/05/2003

Résumé

Our ability to walk on two legs is not only a characteristic human trait but one of the things that made us human in the first place. Once our ancestors could walk on two legs, they began to do many of the things that apes cannot do: cross wide open spaces, manipulate complex tools, communicate with new signal systems, and light fires. Titled after the last two words of Darwin's Descent of Man and written by a leading scholar of human evolution, Lowly Origin is the first book to explain the sources and consequences of bipedalism to a broad audience. Along the way, it accounts for recent fossil discoveries that show us a still incomplete but much bushier family tree than most of us learned about in school.

Jonathan Kingdon uses the very latest findings from ecology, biogeography, and paleontology to build a new and up-to-date account of how four-legged apes became two-legged hominins. He describes what it took to get up onto two legs as well as the protracted consequences of that step--some of which led straight to modern humans and others to very different bipeds. This allows him to make sense of recently unearthed evidence suggesting that no fewer than twenty species of humans and hominins have lived and become extinct. Following the evolution of two-legged creatures from our earliest lowly forebears to the present, Kingdon concludes with future options for the last surviving biped.

A major new narrative of human evolution, Lowly Origin is the best available account of what it meant--and what it means--to walk on two feet.

Contents

  • Preface to a self-portrait from the center of the world
  • On being a primate
  • On being a ape
  • On being a ground ape
  • On becoming a biped
  • On being a manipulative man-ape
  • On the uncertainties of becoming human
  • On going far with fire
  • On being a self-made human
  • In conclusion
Appendix
Index

L'auteur - Jonathan Kingdon

Jonathan Kingdon is a Senior Research Associate at the Institute of Biological Anthropology and Department of Zoology of Oxford University. He is the author of and artist for numerous books, including Self-Made Man and Island Africa (Princeton). The Millennium issue of American Scientist named Kingdon's Atlas of Evolution in Africa one of the "100 books that shaped a century of science."

Caractéristiques techniques

  PAPIER
Éditeur(s) Princeton University Press
Auteur(s) Jonathan Kingdon
Parution 23/05/2003
Nb. de pages 410
Format 16 x 24
Couverture Relié
Poids 745g
Intérieur Noir et Blanc
EAN13 9780691050867
ISBN13 978-0-691-05086-7

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