journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37584402/hierarchies-in-the-energy-budget-thyroid-hormones-and-the-evolution-of-human-life-history-patterns
#21
REVIEW
Stephanie B Levy, Richard G Bribiescas
The evolution of human life history characteristics required dramatic shifts in energy allocation mechanisms compared with our primate ancestors. Thyroid hormones, such as thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3), are sensitive to energy balance, and are significant determinants for both tissue-specific and whole-body metabolic rate. Thus, thyroid hormones are in part responsible for setting the body's overall energy budget and likely played an important role in the evolution of human life history patterns...
August 16, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37555539/books-received
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37555538/addressing-the-growing-fossil-record-of-subadult-hominins-by-reaching-across-disciplines
#23
Debra R Bolter, Noel Cameron, John Hawks, Steven E Churchill, Lee Berger, Robin Bernstein, Julia C Boughner, Sarah Elton, A B Leece, Patrick Mahoney, Keneiloe Molopyane, Tesla A Monson, Jill Pruetz, Lawrence Schell, Kyra E Stull, Christopher A Wolfe
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37527355/the-multifactor-pelvis-an-alternative-to-the-adaptationist-approach-of-the-obstetrical-dilemma
#24
REVIEW
Anna Warrener
The obstetrical dilemma describes the competing demands that a bipedally adapted pelvis and a large-brained neonate place on human childbirth and is the predominant model within which hypotheses about the evolution of the pelvis are framed. I argue the obstetrical dilemma follows the adaptationist program outlined by Gould and Lewontin in 1979 and should be replaced with a new model, the multifactor pelvis. This change will allow thorough consideration of nonadaptive explanations for the evolution of the human pelvis and avoid negative social impacts from considering human childbirth inherently dangerous...
August 1, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37417918/hunter-gatherer-diets-and-activity-as-a-model-for-health-promotion-challenges-responses-and-confirmations
#25
REVIEW
Melvin Konner, S Boyd Eaton
Beginning in 1985, we and others presented estimates of hunter-gatherer (and ultimately ancestral) diet and physical activity, hoping to provide a model for health promotion. The Hunter-Gatherer Model was designed to offset the apparent mismatch between our genes and the current Western-type lifestyle, a mismatch that arguably affects prevalence of many chronic degenerative diseases. The effort has always been controversial and subject to both scientific and popular critiques. The present article (1) addresses eight such challenges, presenting for each how the model has been modified in response, or how the criticism can be rebutted; (2) reviews new epidemiological and experimental evidence (including especially randomized controlled clinical trials); and (3) shows how official recommendations put forth by governments and health authorities have converged toward the model...
August 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37506119/beyond-the-image-interdisciplinary-and-contextual-approaches-to-understanding-symbolic-cognition-in-paleolithic-parietal-art
#26
Isobel Wisher, Murillo Pagnotta, Eduardo Palacio-Pérez, Riccardo Fusaroli, Diego Garate, Derek Hodgson, John Matthews, Larissa Mendoza-Straffon, Blanca Ochoa, Felix Riede, Kristian Tylén
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
July 28, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37486115/a-tooth-crown-morphology-framework-for-interpreting-the-diversity-of-primate-dentitions
#27
REVIEW
Simon A Chapple, Matthew M Skinner
Variation in tooth crown morphology plays a crucial role in species diagnoses, phylogenetic inference, and the reconstruction of the evolutionary history of the primate clade. While a growing number of studies have identified developmental mechanisms linked to tooth size and cusp patterning in mammalian crown morphology, it is unclear (1) to what degree these are applicable across primates and (2) which additional developmental mechanisms should be recognized as playing important roles in odontogenesis. From detailed observations of lower molar enamel-dentine junction morphology from taxa representing the major primate clades, we outline multiple phylogenetic and developmental components responsible for crown patterning, and formulate a tooth crown morphology framework for the holistic interpretation of primate crown morphology...
July 24, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37450551/deconstructing-eurocentrism-in-skin-pigmentation-research-via-the-incorporation-of-diverse-populations-and-theoretical-perspectives
#28
REVIEW
Yemko Pryor, John Lindo
The evolution of skin pigmentation has been shaped by numerous biological and cultural shifts throughout human history. Vitamin D is considered a driver of depigmentation evolution in humans, given the deleterious health effects associated with vitamin D deficiency, which is often shaped by cultural factors. New advancements in genomics and epigenomics have opened the door to a deeper exploration of skin pigmentation evolution in both contemporary and ancient populations. Data from ancient Europeans has offered great context to the spread of depigmentation alleles via the evaluation of migration events and cultural shifts that occurred during the Neolithic...
July 14, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37392088/william-l-jungers-a-gentle-giant-in-madagascar
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laurie R Godfrey, David A Burney
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
July 1, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37335778/the-estimation-and-evolution-of-hominin-body-mass
#30
REVIEW
Christopher B Ruff, Bernard A Wood
Body mass is a critical variable in many hominin evolutionary studies, with implications for reconstructing relative brain size, diet, locomotion, subsistence strategy, and social organization. We review methods that have been proposed for estimating body mass from true and trace fossils, consider their applicability in different contexts, and the appropriateness of different modern reference samples. Recently developed techniques based on a wider range of modern populations hold promise for providing more accurate estimates in earlier hominins, although uncertainties remain, particularly in non-Homo taxa...
June 19, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37269494/male-male-relationships-in-chimpanzees-and-the-evolution-of-human-pair-bonds
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aaron A Sandel
The evolution of monogamy has been a central question in biological anthropology. An important avenue of research has been comparisons across "socially monogamous" mammals, but such comparisons are inappropriate for understanding human behavior because humans are not "pair living" and are only sometimes "monogamous." It is the "pair bond" between reproductive partners that is characteristic of humans and has been considered unique to our lineage. I argue that pair bonds have been overlooked in one of our closest living relatives, chimpanzees...
June 3, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37264979/amazonian%C3%A2-monkeys-and-kafka-s-ape-at-the-german-primate-center
#32
Bernardo Urbani, Gabriel Robinson-González
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 2, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37294897/books-received
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37172138/mental-health-and-well-being-in-primatology-breaking-the-taboos
#34
REVIEW
Joanna M Setchell, Steve Unwin, Susan M Cheyne
We hope to raise awareness of mental health and well-being among primatologists. With this aim in mind, we organized a workshop on mental health as part of the main program of the Winter meeting of the Primate Society of Great Britain in December 2021. The workshop was very well received. Here, we review the main issues raised in the workshop, and supplement them with our own observations, reflections, and reading. The information we gathered during the workshop reveals clear hazards to mental health and suggests that we must collectively acknowledge and better manage both the hazards themselves and our ability to cope with them if we are to avert disaster...
June 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36632711/the-australopithecus-assemblage-from-sterkfontein-member-4-south-africa-and-the-concept-of-variation-in-palaeontology
#35
REVIEW
Amélie Beaudet
Interpreting morphological variation within the early hominin fossil record is particularly challenging. Apart from the fact that there is no absolute threshold for defining species boundaries in palaeontology, the degree of variation related to sexual dimorphism, temporal depth, geographic variation or ontogeny is difficult to appreciate in a fossil taxon mainly represented by fragmentary specimens, and such variation could easily be conflated with taxonomic diversity. One of the most emblematic examples in paleoanthropology is the Australopithecus assemblage from the Sterkfontein Caves in South Africa...
June 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37139701/benchmarking-methods-and-data-for-the-whole-outline-geometric-morphometric-analysis-of-lithic-tools
#36
Renata P Araujo, Felix Riede, Mercedes Okumura, Astolfo G M Araujo, Alice Leplongeon, Colin Wren, José R Rabuñal, Marcelo Cardillo, María B Cruz, David N Matzig
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
May 4, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37120841/primatology-at-the-2023-annual-meeting-of-the-society-for-integrative-comparative-biology
#37
Chris Claypool
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 30, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37066856/human-consumption-of-large-herbivore-digesta-and-its-implications-for-foraging-theory
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Raven Garvey
Vegetal matter undergoing digestion in herbivores' stomachs and intestines, digesta, can be an important source of dietary carbohydrates for human foragers. Digesta significantly increases large herbivores' total caloric yield and broadens their nutritional profile to include three key macronutrients (protein, fat, and carbohydrates) in amounts sufficient to sustain small foraging groups for multiple days without supplementation. Ethnographic reports of routine digesta consumption are limited to high latitudes, but the practice may have had a wider distribution prehistorically...
April 17, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37014801/not-just-in-the-past-racist-and-sexist-biases-still-permeate-biology-anthropology-medicine-and-education
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rui Diogo, Adeyemi Adesomo, Kimberly S Farmer, Rachel J Kim, Fatimah Jackson
In the past decades, it has been increasingly recognized that some areas of science, such as anthropology, have been plagued by racist, Western-centric, and/or sexist biases. Unfortunately, an acculturation process to racism and sexism has been occurring for generations leading to systemic inequities that will take a long time to disappear. Here, we highlight the existence of current examples of how racism, Western-centrism and sexism within: (1) the most popular anatomical atlases used in biological, anthropological and medical education; (2) prominent natural history museums and World Heritage Sites; (3) biological and anthropological scientific research publications; and (4) popular culture and influential children's books and educational materials concerning human biology and evolution...
April 4, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36809525/twelfth-annual-meeting-of-the-european-society-for-the-study-of-human-evolution
#40
Julia Zastrow, Simona Affinito, Gregor D Bader, Susan M Mentzer
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 21, 2023: Evolutionary Anthropology
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