Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Finlayson, Clive, 1955- author

Title The improbable primate : how water shaped human evolution / Clive Finlayson
Edition First edition
Published Oxford, United Kingdom : Oxford University Press, 2014

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xix, 202 pages) : illustrations, maps
Contents The inverted panda -- And the world changed forever -- At the lake's edge -- The first humans -- Middle earth: the home of the first humans -- The drying world of the Middle Pleistocene -- The rain chasers: solutions in a drying world -- The exceptional world of the Neanderthal -- Global expansion of the rain chasers -- Australia -- From Lake Chad to Puritjarra and beyond
Summary In this fresh and provocative view of a seven-million-year evolutionary journey, Finlayson demonstrates the radical implications for the interpretation of fossils and technologies and shows that understanding humans within an ecological context provides insights into the emergence and spread of Homo sapiens worldwide. Finlayson argues that environmental change, particularly availability of water, played a critical role in shaping the direction of human evolution, contributing to our spread and success. He argues that our ancestors carved a niche for themselves by leaving the forest and forcing their way into a long-established community of carnivores in a tropical savannah as climate changes opened up the landscape. They took their chance at high noon, when most other predators were asleep. Adapting to this new lifestyle by shedding their hair and developing an active sweating system to keep cool, being close to fresh water was vital. As the climate dried, our ancestors, already bipedal, became taller and slimmer, more adept at travelling farther in search of water. The challenges of seeking water in a drying landscape moulded the minds and bodies of early humans, and directed their migrations and eventual settlements. In this fresh and provocative view of a seven-million-year evolutionary journey, Finlayson demonstrates the radical implications for the interpretation of fossils and technologies and shows that understanding humans within an ecological context provides insights into the emergence and spread of Homo sapiens sapiens worldwide
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 153-191) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Human beings -- Origin.
Water -- History
Human evolution.
Paleoecology -- Pleistocene.
Human beings -- Effect of environment on.
Monogenism and polygenism.
Neanderthals.
Paleoanthropology.
Homo neanderthalensis (extinct species)
paleoanthropology.
NATURE -- Fossils.
Human beings -- Effect of environment on
Human beings -- Origin
Human evolution
Monogenism and polygenism
Neanderthals
Paleoanthropology
Paleoecology
Pleistocene Geologic Epoch
Water
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780191503771
0191503770
1306411882
9781306411882