Waubonsee Community College

The wisdom of the bones, in search of human origins, Alan Walker and Pat Shipman

Label
The wisdom of the bones, in search of human origins, Alan Walker and Pat Shipman
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 317-326) and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrationsplates
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The wisdom of the bones
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
33008889
Responsibility statement
Alan Walker and Pat Shipman
Sub title
in search of human origins
Summary
A remarkable discovery was made a decade ago on a dig in northern Kenya. When all the bone and skull fragments were painstakingly pieced together, they revealed the nearly complete skeleton of a teenage male (nicknamed Nariokotome boy, after a nearby sand river). Faced with the best-ever specimen of Homo erectus - a species long identified as the proverbial missing link between apes and humans - paleoanthropologist Alan Walker embarked on a long-term investigation of that species's nature. In this book, telling the story of that inquiry, he introduces us to his ever surprising, deeply engrossing worldWalker examines even the tiniest of bones and the subtlest of clues in his analysis. He first recounts the story of the more-than-century-long search for the "missing link," a bizarre and compelling saga made up of brilliant science and speculative nonsense. Then he builds, step-by-step, on some of his predecessors' assumptions, and he challenges others, using state-of-the-art techniques to reveal the truth. In Walker's hands the bones reveal an amazing amount of information about the Nariokotome boy's anatomy and the way he lived. We watch as Walker deduces from the evidence that community and cooperation were already very important at this stage of human evolution; that the boy was modern in climatic adaptation and locomotion yet archaic in growth pattern; and that the boy could not speak. In Walker's final assessment this last insight becomes the most important one
Table Of Contents
The youth, stone dead -- A skeleton in the closet -- Chinese fortunes -- The man who lost the missing link -- Missing links from the missing continent -- Sex & the missing link -- The single species solo -- Food for thought -- Vital statistics on a dead boy -- Skeleton keys -- The predatory habit -- A balanced perspective -- Rendered speechless -- Finding links, missing links
Classification
Content
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