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Mapping Our Ancestors - Phylogenetic Approaches in Anthropology and Prehistory (Paperback)
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Mapping Our Ancestors - Phylogenetic Approaches in Anthropology and Prehistory (Paperback)
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Much of what we are comes from our ancestors. Through cultural and
biological inheritance mechanisms, our genetic composition,
instructions for constructing artifacts, the structure and content
of languages, and rules for behavior are passed from parents to
children and from individual to individual. "Mapping Our Ancestors"
demonstrates how various genealogical or "phylogenetic" methods can
be used both to answer questions about human history and to build
evolutionary explanations for the shape of history.
Anthropologists are increasingly turning to quantitative
phylogenetic methods. These methods depend on the transmission of
information regardless of mode and as such are applicable to many
anthropological questions. In this way, phylogenetic approaches
have the potential for building bridges among the various
subdisciplines of anthropology; an exciting prospect indeed. The
structure of "Mapping Our Ancestors" reflects the editors' goal of
developing a common understanding of the methods and conditions
under which ancestral relations can be derived in a range of data
classes of interest to anthropologists. Specifically, this volume
explores the degree to which patterns of ancestry can be determined
from artifactual, genetic, linguistic, and behavioral data and how
processes such as selection, transmission, and geography impact the
results of phylogenetic analyses.
"Mapping Our Ancestors" provides a solid demonstration of the
potential of phylogenetic methods for studying the evolutionary
history of human populations using a variety of data sources and
thus helps explain how cultural material, language, and biology
came to be as they are.
Carl P. Lipo is assistant professor of anthropology at California
State University in Long Beach. Michael O'Brien is professor of
anthropology and director of the Museum of Anthropology at the
University of Missouri. Mark Collard is assistant professor of
anthropology at the University of British Columbia, Stephen J.
Shennan is a professor and director of the Institute of Archaeology
at the University College London. Niles Eldredge is a curator in
the department of invertebrates at the American Museum of Natural
History, and adjunct professor at the City University of New York.
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