Welcome to STUDYtactics.com A Service of Trinity International University  
  BOOKS eCONTENT SPECIALTY STORES MY STUDYaides MY ACCOUNT  
New & Used Books
 
Product Detail
Product Information   |  Other Product Information

Product Information
Introduction to the Primates
Introduction to the Primates
Author: Swindler, Daris R.
Edition/Copyright: 1998
ISBN: 0-295-97704-3
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Type: Paperback
Other Product Information
Summary
 
  Summary

Introduction to the Primates is a comprehensive but compact guide to the long evolutionary history of the world's prosimians, monkeys, and apes, and to the much shorter history of humankind's interactions with them, from our earliest recorded observations to the severe threats we now pose to their survival.

Daris Swindler chronicles our continuing interest in our closest nonhuman relatives and our growing understanding of them. After establishing the principles of taxonomy and the requirements for classification as a primate, he provides a detailed description of the major primate groups and their environments, from the smallest lemurs of Madagascar to the gorillas of central Africa. He compares and contrasts the primate species, looking at each with a specific anatomical focus: blood groups; the skull; teeth, diet, and digestion; the brain and the senses; and the skeleton and locomotion; and growth and development. The range of diversity emerges as the particular characteristics of the species become increasingly distinct.

Swindler also considers primate behavior and its close connections with environment and evolutionary differences. Primate practices such as brachiation, knuckle-walking, toolmaking, and communication are compared across species.

The fossil record of the world's primates reveals dental traces of the Paleocene epoch's Purgatorius, the earliest candidate for classification as a primate, and the increasingly rich findings of more recent eras. Swindler demonstrates the drama of paleontology as evidence accrues, hypotheses are formed, challenged, and reconsidered, and gaps in the history of primate evolution gradually close.

This account of 65 million years of successful adaptation and evolution concludes with a chapter on the great threat the success of the most recent primate, Homo sapiens, now poses to the survival of the world's nonhuman primates. Because our close familial ties to these creatures has been made so plain, this last message is particularly poignant and effective.

 

New & Used Books -  eContent -  Specialty Stores -  My STUDYaides -  My Account

Terms of Service & Privacy PolicyContact UsHelp © 1995-2024 STUDYtactics, All Rights Reserved