Concise, well-balanced, and comprehensive, ESSENTIALS OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 10th Edition, introduces you to physical anthropology with the goal of helping you understand why it is important to know about human evolution. You'll learn how humans are biologically connected to all other life, including our ancient ancestors and our contemporary primate cousins, and how closely modern human populations are related to each other. Numerous high-quality visual diagrams, artwork, maps, photographs, and other learning tools will help you grasp the big picture of human evolution.
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Product Details
Weight: 975g
Dimensions: 217 x 275mm
Publication Date: 02 Mar 2016
Publisher: Cengage Learning Inc
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781305633810
About Eric BartelinkLynn KilgoreRobert JurmainWenda Trevathan
Eric Bartelink received a B.S. in Anthropology from Central Michigan University (1995) an M.A. in Anthropology at California State University Chico (2001) and a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Texas A&M University (2006). He has taught for eleven years at California State University Chico where he is currently a Full Professor and Director of the Human Identification Laboratory. He teaches courses in introductory physical anthropology human osteology human growth and development human origins bioarchaeology forensic anthropology and statistics. His research interests focus on the bioarchaeology of Native California dietary reconstruction using stable isotope analysis and applications within forensic anthropology. He is a co-author on ESSENTIALS OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY (10e Cengage Learning) FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGY: CURRENT METHODS AND PRACTICE (2014 Academic/Elsevier Press) and has authored and co-authored numerous articles in scientific journals. Robert Jurmain received an A.B. in Anthropology from UCLA and a Ph.D. in Biological Anthropology from Harvard. He taught at San Jose State University from 1975 to 2004 and is now professor emeritus. During his teaching career he taught courses in all major branches of physical anthropology including osteology and human evolution with the greatest concentration in general education teaching for introductory students. His research interests are skeletal biology of humans and non-human primates paleopathology and paleoanthropology. In addition to his three textbooks which together have appeared in 35 editions he is the author of STORIES FROM THE SKELETON: BEHAVIORAL RECONSTRUCTION IN HUMAN OSTEOLOGY (1999 Gordon Breach Publishers) as well as numerous articles in research journals. Lynn Kilgore earned her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado Boulder where she now holds an affiliate faculty position. Her primary research interests are osteology and paleopathology. She has taught numerous undergraduate and graduate courses in human osteology primate behavior human heredity and evolution and general physical anthropology. Her research focuses on developmental defects as well as on disease and trauma in human and great ape skeletons. Wenda Trevathan is regents' professor emerita of anthropology at New Mexico State University where she taught from 1983 to 2009. She is a biological anthropologist whose research focuses on the evolutionary and biocultural factors underlying human reproduction including childbirth maternal behavior sexuality and menopause. Her primary publications include works on the evolution of childbirth and evolutionary medicine. Her recent books include ANCIENT BODIES MODERN LIVES: HOW EVOLUTION HAS SHAPED WOMEN'S HEALTH (2010 Oxford University Press) and COSTLY AND CUTE: HELPLESS INFANTS AND HUMAN EVOLUTION (2016 SAR/UNM Press). She is also the Editor in Chief of the INTERNATIONAL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY which will be published by John Wiley and Sons in 2018. She has taught courses in physical anthropology nutritional anthropology medical anthropology evolutionary medicine and anthropology of reproduction.