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Functional Inference in Paleoanthropology: Theory and Practice

✍ Scribed by David J. Daegling


Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Year
2022
Tongue
English
Leaves
279
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


In this deep examination of functional morphology, a renowned paleoanthropologist offers a new way to investigate human evolution through the fossil record.

It is common for two functional anatomists to examine the exact same fossil material, yet argue over its evolutionary significance. How can this be?

Traditionally, paleoanthropology has interpreted hominin fossil morphology by first considering the ecological challenges hominins faced, then drawing adaptive inferences based on the idea that skeletal morphology is largely a reflection of paleoecology. In Functional Inference in Paleoanthropology, innovative paleoanthropologist David J. Daegling suggests that researchers can resolve dichotomous interpretations of the fossil record by instead focusing on the biology and development of the bones themselves―such as measurable responses to deformations, stresses, and damage. Critically exploring how scientists probe and interpret fossil morphology for behavioral and adaptive inferences, Daegling makes the case that an intelligible science of functional morphology in the fossil record is impossible without the inclusion of this mechanobiological perspective.

Drawing on historical examples from long-standing debates on the emergence of bipedality and the dietary shifts that facilitated the emergence of the hominin clade, Daegling traces the disjunctions between theoretical principles of comparative morphology and methodological practice in the paleontological context of human evolution. Sharing rich findings from recent decades of research in skeletal biomechanics, Functional Inference in Paleoanthropology examines how bone adapts over the lifespan, what environmental factors influence its quality, and how developmental constraints limit the skeleton's adaptive potential over evolutionary time.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Preface
1 Unresolved Problems in Human Evolution
2 Situating Functional Morphology in Evolutionary Biology
Defining Adaptation: Essential or Esoteric?
Repackaging the Enterprise
Form versus Function: The Question of Primacy
The Formalization of Structuralism
Paleobiology and Uniformitarian Principles
Allometry as Explanation
Total Morphological Pattern
Developmental Perspectives on Bone Morphology
The Mechanostat
Mechanobiology
Interpreting Bone Morphology through Phenotypic Plasticity
Teleonomy Reexamined
Form versus Function: Philosophically Trivial or Pragmatically Crucial?
3 Approaches to Functional Inference in Paleoanthropology
The Great Escape Hatch: More Fossils Will Fix Everything
Does the General Approach Matter?
Multiscalar Approaches to Functional Inference
The Comparative Calculus
Rules of Engagement
Is Process Discoverable via Pattern?
The Paradigm Method
Analogy
Phylogenetic Brackets
Biomechanical Reduction
Morphogenesis through Mechanobiology
The Law of the Hammer
The Relationship of Method to Theory
4 Bipedality
The Ecological Question
The Energetics Question
The Precursor Question
Same Fossils, Different Functions: Compromise versus Efficiency
The Pedal Rays
The Innominate
Limb Proportions
The Bar-Glenoid Angle
The Femoral Neck
Who Does One Believe?
5 Hominin Dietary Adaptations
Postcanine Megadontia
Occlusal Morphology and Bunodonty
Facial Skeleton
Nonmorphological Means of Inference
Reconciling Contradictions
A Productive Role for Contingency
A Structuralist Perspective on the Early Hominid Skull
6 The Osteocyte Perspective on Human Evolution
Bone Adaptation: The View from the Mailroom
Testing Equifinality
Too Many Degrees of Freedom
Only People Speak, and Only People Have Chins
Theoretical Morphology of Bone Growth: Shear Strain as the Architect
What Do Osteocytes Think About?
Expanding the Prescription
7 Teleonomy Revisited
Conjuring Human Evolution with Numbers and Skepticism
Bad Paradigm or Bad Practice?
Lowering Expectations Now for a Mature Science Later
Notes
References
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
T
U
C
W
Y
Z


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