Solution Manual for Cengage Advantage Books Understanding Humans An Introduction to Physical Anthropology and Archaeology, 11th Edition

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  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1111831777
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1111831776
  • Author:  Barry Lewis (Author), Robert Jurmain (Author), Lynn Kilgore (Author)

UNDERSTANDING HUMANS: INTRODUCTION TO PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY shows students how anthropologists and archaeologists go about their work as they study human evolution, living nonhuman primates, human adaptation and variation, the origin and dispersal of modern humans, food production, the first civilizations of the Old and New Worlds, and so much more. Using a biocultural approach, the text balances the presentation of physical anthropology with archaeology and concludes with a new chapter that ties together the material on human biological and cultural adaptation by focusing on lessons learned from our species evolution such as the impact of humans on the environment. Students will also benefit from the new chapter opening learning objectives, “At a Glance” sections that summarize key concepts, and end-of-chapter “Critical Thinking Questions” that help students better understand the material and study more effectively for exams.

 

Table of Content:

  1. Part 1: Anthropology
  2. Ch 1: Introduction to Anthropology
  3. Learning Objectives
  4. The Biocultural Approach
  5. What is Anthropology?
  6. The Scientific Method
  7. The Anthropological Perspective
  8. Summary of Main Topics
  9. Critical Thinking Questions
  10. Part 2: Heredity and Evolution
  11. Ch 2: The Development of Evolutionary Theory
  12. Learning Objectives
  13. A Brief History of Evolutionary Thought
  14. Natural Selection
  15. Constraints on Nineteenth-Century Evolutionary Theory
  16. Opposition to Evolution
  17. Summary of Main Topics
  18. Critical Thinking Questions
  19. Ch 3: Heredity and Evolution
  20. Learning Objectives
  21. The Cell
  22. DNA Structure and Function
  23. Cell Division: Mitosis and Meiosis
  24. The Genetic Principles Discovered by Mendel
  25. Misconceptions Regarding Dominance and Recessiveness
  26. Polygenic Inheritance
  27. Genetic and Environmental Factors
  28. Mitochondrial Inheritance
  29. New Frontiers
  30. Modern Evolutionary Theory
  31. Factors That Produce and Redistribute Variation
  32. Natural Selection Acts on Variation
  33. Summary of Main Topics
  34. Critical Thinking Questions
  35. Ch 4: Modern Human Variation and Adaptation
  36. Learning Objectives
  37. Historical Views of Human Variation
  38. The Concept of Race
  39. Contemporary Interpretations of Human Variation
  40. Human Biocultural Evolution
  41. Population Genetics
  42. The Adaptive Significance of Human Variation
  43. The Continuing Impact of Infectious Disease
  44. Summary of Main Topics
  45. Critical Thinking Questions
  46. Ch 5: Macroevolution: Processes of Vertebrate and Mammalian Evolution
  47. Learning Objectives
  48. How We Connect: Discovering the Human Place in the Organic World
  49. Principles of Classification
  50. Constructing Classifications and Interpreting Evolutionary Relationships
  51. Definition of Species
  52. Interpreting Species and Other Groups in the Fossil Record
  53. What are Fossils and How Do They Form?
  54. Vertebrate Evolutionary History: A Brief Summary
  55. Mammalian Evolution
  56. The Emergence of Major Mammalian Groups
  57. Processes of Macroevolution
  58. Summary of Main Topics
  59. Critical Thinking Questions
  60. Part 3: Primates
  61. Ch 6: An Overview of the Primates
  62. Learning Objectives
  63. Primate Characteristics
  64. Primate Adaptations
  65. Primate Classification
  66. A Survey of the Living Primates
  67. Endangered Primates
  68. Summary of Main Topics
  69. Critical Thinking Questions
  70. Ch 7: Primate Behavior
  71. Learning Objectives
  72. The Evolution of Behavior
  73. Why be Social?
  74. Primate Social Behavior
  75. Reproduction and Reproductive Behaviors
  76. Mothers, Fathers, and Infants
  77. Primate Cultural Behavior
  78. Language
  79. The Primate Continuum
  80. Summary of Main Topics
  81. Critical Thinking Questions
  82. Part 4: Paleoanthropology/Fossil Hominins
  83. Ch 8: Understanding the Past: Archaeological and Paleoanthropological Methods
  84. Learning Objectives
  85. Biocultural Evolution: The Human Capacity for Culture
  86. Paleoanthropology
  87. Archaeology
  88. Piecing Together the Past
  89. Dating Methods
  90. Paleoanthropology and Archaeology at Olduvai Gorge
  91. Summary of Main Topics
  92. Critical Thinking Questions
  93. Ch 9: Hominin Origins
  94. Learning Objectives
  95. Early Primate Evolution
  96. Miocene Fossil Hominoids: Closer Connections to Apes and Humans
  97. Understanding Our Direct Evolutionary Connections: What’s a Hominin?
  98. Walking the Walk: The Bipedal Adaptation
  99. Digging for Connections: Early Hominins from Africa
  100. Pre-Australopiths (6.0+ -4.4 mya)
  101. Australopiths (4.2-1.2 mya)
  102. Closer Connections: Early Homo (2.0+-1.4 mya)
  103. The Lower Paleolithic Period: Emergence of Human Culture
  104. Interpretations: What Does It All Mean?
  105. Seeing the Big Picture: Adaptive Patterns of Early African Hominins
  106. Summary of Main Topics
  107. Critical Thinking Questions
  108. Ch 10: The First Dispersal of the Genus Homo: Homo Erectus and Contemporaries
  109. Learning Objectives
  110. A New Kind of Hominin
  111. The Morphology of Homo erectus
  112. The First Homo Erectus: Homo Erectus from Africa
  113. Who were the Earliest African Emigrants?
  114. Homo Erectus from Indonesia
  115. Homo Erectus from China
  116. Asian and African Homo erectus: A Comparison
  117. Later Homo Erectus from Europe
  118. Archaeology of Early Hominin Dispersal
  119. Seeing the Big Picture: Interpretations of Homo Erectus
  120. Summary of Main Topics
  121. Critical Thinking Questions
  122. Ch 11: Premodern Humans
  123. Learning Objectives
  124. When, Where, and What
  125. Premodern Humans of the Middle Pleistocene
  126. Lower Paleolithic Premodern Human Culture
  127. Neandertals: Premodern Humans of the Late Pleistocene
  128. Middle Paleolithic Culture
  129. Molecular Connections: The Genetic Evidence
  130. Seeing Close Human Connections: Understanding Premodern Humans
  131. Summary of Main Topics
  132. Critical Thinking Questions
  133. Ch 12: The Origin and Dispersal of Modern Humans
  134. Learning Objectives
  135. Approaches to Understanding Modern Human Origins
  136. The Earliest Discoveries of Modern Humans
  137. Something New and Different: The “Little People”
  138. Upper Paleolithic Technology and Art
  139. Summary of Upper Paleolithic Culture
  140. Summary of Main Topics
  141. Critical Thinking Questions
  142. Part 5: Archaeology
  143. Ch 13: Early Holocene Hunters and Gatherers
  144. Learning Objectives
  145. Entering the New World
  146. The Earliest Americans
  147. Paleo-Indians in the Americas
  148. Early Holocene Hunter-Gatherers
  149. Case Studies of Early Holocene Cultures
  150. Summary of Main Topics
  151. Critical Thinking Questions
  152. Ch 14: Food Production
  153. Learning Objectives
  154. The Neolithic Revolution
  155. Explaining the Origins of Domestication and Agriculture
  156. Archaeological Evidence for Domestication and Agriculture
  157. Old World Farmers
  158. New World Farmers
  159. Summary of Main Topics
  160. Critical Thinking Questions
  161. Ch 15: The First Civilizations
  162. Learning Objectives
  163. Civilizations in Perspective
  164. Why Did Civilizations Form?
  165. Old World Civilizations
  166. New World Civilizations
  167. Summary of Main Topics
  168. Critical Thinking Questions
  169. Ch 16: Biocultural Evolution and the Anthropocene
  170. Learning Objectives
  171. Human Success and the Anthropocene
  172. Consequences of Biocultural Evolution
  173. Learning from the Past and Facing an Uncertain Future
  174. Summary of Main Topics
  175. Critical Thinking Questions
  176. Appendix A: Atlas of Primate Skeletal Anatomy
  177. Appendix B: Summary of Early Hominin Fossil Finds from Africa
  178. Appendix C: Population Genetics
  179. Glossary
  180. Bibliography
  181. Index