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Reconstructing Mobility

Environmental, Behavioral, and Morphological Determinants

Specificaties
Gebonden, 295 blz. | Engels
Springer US | 2014e druk, 2014
ISBN13: 9781489974594
Rubricering
Springer US 2014e druk, 2014 9781489974594
Verwachte levertijd ongeveer 9 werkdagen

Samenvatting

Assembles a collection of experts to provide a current account of different approaches (e.g., traditional, comparative and experimental) being applied to study mobility. Moreover, the book aims to stimulate new theoretical perspectives that adopt a holistic view of the interaction among intrinsic (i.e. skeletal) and extrinsic (i.e. environmental) factors that influence differential expression of mobility. Since the environment undoubtedly impacts mobility of a wide variety of animals, insights into human mobility, as a concept, can be improved by extending approaches to investigating comparable environmental influences on mobility in animals in general. The book teases apart environmental effects that transcend typical categories (e.g., coastal versus inland, mountainous versus level, arboreal versus terrestrial). Such an approach, when coupled with a new emphasis on mobility as types of activities rather than activity levels, offers a fresh, insightful perspective on mobility and how it might affect the musculoskeletal system.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9781489974594
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:gebonden
Aantal pagina's:295
Uitgever:Springer US
Druk:2014

Inhoudsopgave

<p>Chapter 1: Introduction: Towards Refining the Concept of Mobility.- Chapter 2: Long Bone Structural Analyses and the Reconstruction of Past Mobility: A Historical Review.- Chapter 3: Bipedalism and Musculoskeletal Stress Markers: Variation and What it reveals About Adaptation, Environmental Stress, and Reconstructing Activity Patterns.- Chapter 4: Does the Distribution and Variation in Cortical Bone along Lower Limb Diaphyses Reflect Selection for Locomotor Economy?.- Chapter 5: Human Variation in the Periosteal Geometry of the Lower Limb: Signatures of Behaviour among Human Holocene Populations.- Chapter 6: The Importance of Considering Fibular Robusticity when Inferring the Mobility Patterns of Past Populations.- Chapter 7: The Relationship between Femur Shape and Terrestrial Mobility Patterns.- Chapter 8: Activity, Body Shape, and Cross-sectional Geometry of the Femur and Tibia.- Chapter 9: Variation in Mobility and Anatomical Responses in the Late Pleistocene.- Chapter 10: Femoral Diaphyseal Shape and Mobility: An Ontogenetic Perspective.- Chapter 11: The Balance between Burden Carrying, Variable Terrain and Thermoregulatory Pressures in Assessing Morphological Variation.- Chapter 12: Territory Size in Canis lupus: Implications for Neandertal Mobility.- Chapter 13: The Effects of Terrain on Long Bone Robusticity and Cross-sectional Shape in Lower Limb Bones of Bovids, Neandertals, and Upper Paleolithic Modern Humans.- Chapter 14: Linearity in the Real World – An Experimental Assessment of Non-linearity in Terrestrial Locomotion.- Chapter </p><p>15 Femoral Mechanics, Mobility, and Finite Element Analysis.- </p><p><p>15 Femoral Mechanics, Mobility, and Finite Element Analysis.- </p>

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        Reconstructing Mobility