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1.
Int J Orthod Milwaukee ; 27(1): 6, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27319031
3.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 137(4): 384-96, 2008 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18615503

RESUMO

Recent advances in the methods of skeletal age estimation have rekindled interest in their applicability to paleodemography. The current study contributes to the discussion by applying several long established as well as recently developed or refined aging methods to a subsample of 121 adult skeletons from the early medieval cemetery of Lauchheim. The skeletal remains were analyzed by 13 independent observers using a variety of aging techniques (complex method and other multimethod approaches, Transition Analysis, cranial suture closure, auricular surface method, osteon density method, tooth root translucency measurement, and tooth cementum annulation counting). The age ranges and mean age estimations were compared and results indicate that all methods showed smaller age ranges for the younger individuals, but broader age ranges for the older age groups.


Assuntos
Osso e Ossos/anatomia & histologia , Demografia , Paleontologia/métodos , Adolescente , Adulto , Determinação da Idade pelo Esqueleto , Arqueologia/métodos , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Europa (Continente) , Feminino , Alemanha , História Medieval , Humanos , Úmero/anatomia & histologia , Masculino , Paleontologia/história , Análise para Determinação do Sexo , Estados Unidos , Adulto Jovem
4.
Hist Philos Life Sci ; 40(1): 22, 2018 Jan 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29362901

RESUMO

Palaeontology developed as a field dependent upon comparison. Not only did reconstructing the fragmentary records of fossil organisms and placing them within taxonomic systems and evolutionary lineages require detailed anatomical comparisons with living and fossil animals, but the field also required thinking in terms of behavioural, biological and ecological analogies with modern organisms to understand how prehistoric animals lived and behaved. Yet palaeontological material often worked against making easy linkages, bringing a sense of mystery and doubt. This paper will look at an animal whose study exemplified these problems: the Chalicothere. Increasingly (although not unproblematically) recognized as a specific type from finds across North America and Eurasia from the early nineteenth century onwards, these prehistoric mammals showed short back legs terminating in pawed feet, long front limbs ending in sharp claws, a long flexible neck, and herbivorous grinding teeth. The Chalicothere became a significant organism within palaeontological studies, as the unexpected mix of characters made it a textbook example against the Cuvierian notion of "correlation of parts," while explaining how the animal moved, fed and behaved became puzzling. However, rather than prevent comparisons, these actually led to comparative analogies becoming flexible and varied, with different forms of comparison being made with varying methods and degrees of confidence, and with the anatomy, movement and behaviour of giraffes, bears, horses, anteaters, primates and other organisms all serving at various points as potential models for different aspects of the animal. This paper will examine some of the attempts to reconstruct and define the Chalicotheres across a long timescale, using this to show how multiple comparisons and analogies could be deployed in a reconstructive and evolutionary science like palaeontology, and illustrate some of the limits and tensions in comparative methods, as they were used to reconstruct organisms which were thought to be incomparable to any modern animal.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Fósseis/anatomia & histologia , Paleontologia/história , Perissodáctilos/anatomia & histologia , Animais , Ecologia , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX
5.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; Suppl 45: 106-32, 2007.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18046746

RESUMO

Paranthropus boisei is a hominin taxon with a distinctive cranial and dental morphology. Its hypodigm has been recovered from sites with good stratigraphic and chronological control, and for some morphological regions, such as the mandible and the mandibular dentition, the samples are not only relatively well dated, but they are, by paleontological standards, reasonably-sized. This means that researchers can trace the evolution of metric and nonmetric variables across hundreds of thousands of years. This paper is a detailed review of half a century's worth of fossil evidence and analysis of P. boisei and traces how both its evolutionary history and our understanding of its evolutionary history have evolved during the past 50 years.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Hominidae , Paleontologia/história , África Oriental , Animais , Comportamento , Dieta , Ecossistema , Feminino , Fósseis , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Hominidae/classificação , Humanos , Masculino , Mandíbula , Paleodontologia , Filogenia , Caracteres Sexuais , Crânio
6.
Riv Biol ; 99(2): 287-306, 2006.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17115373

RESUMO

Nebraska Man was a fossil discovery that was regarded by several leading experts as important in understanding evolutionary history. The only evidence for this anthropod was a single tooth (which turned out to be a pigs' tooth). The discovery and controversy surrounding the Nebraska Man (Hesperopithecus haroldcookii hominoidea) fossil find and its importance in history are reviewed. Its supporters' writings reveal the critical role that preconceptions played in interpreting the limited evidence. Nebraska Man provides a valuable lesson on the importance of presumptions in interpreting evidence in the field of human origins. It also stresses the need for careful evaluation of the empirical evidence for new ideas, and the danger of going beyond what the facts warrant.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Hominidae , Paleontologia/história , Suínos , Animais , Fósseis , História do Século XX , Hominidae/anatomia & histologia , Humanos , Nebraska , Paleontologia/métodos , Filogenia , Dente/anatomia & histologia , Estados Unidos
7.
PLoS One ; 6(2): e16525, 2011 Feb 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21364934

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Gaudeamus is an enigmatic hystricognathous rodent that was, until recently, known solely from fragmentary material from early Oligocene sites in Egypt, Oman, and Libya. Gaudeamus' molars are similar to those of the extant cane rat Thryonomys, and multiple authorities have aligned Gaudeamus with Thryonomys to the exclusion of other living and extinct African hystricognaths; recent phylogenetic analyses have, however, also suggested affinities with South American caviomorphs or Old World porcupines (Hystricidae). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we describe the oldest known remains of Gaudeamus, including largely complete but crushed crania and complete upper and lower dentitions. Unlike younger Gaudeamus species, the primitive species described here have relatively complex occlusal patterns, and retain a number of plesiomorphic features. Unconstrained parsimony analysis nests Gaudeamus and Hystrix within the South American caviomorph radiation, implying what we consider to be an implausible back-dispersal across the Atlantic Ocean to account for Gaudeamus' presence in the late Eocene of Africa. An analysis that was constrained to recover the biogeographically more plausible hypothesis of caviomorph monophyly does not place Gaudeamus as a stem caviomorph, but rather as a sister taxon of hystricids. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We place Gaudeamus species in a new family, Gaudeamuridae, and consider it likely that the group originated, diversified, and then went extinct over a geologically brief period of time during the latest Eocene and early Oligocene in Afro-Arabia. Gaudeamurids are the only known crown hystricognaths from Afro-Arabia that are likely to be aligned with non-phiomorph members of that clade, and as such provide additional support for an Afro-Arabian origin of advanced stem and basal crown members of Hystricognathi.


Assuntos
Classificação/métodos , Paleontologia/história , Roedores/classificação , Crânio/anatomia & histologia , Dente/anatomia & histologia , África , Animais , Dentição , Antigo Egito , Fósseis , História Antiga , Modelos Biológicos , Filogenia , Filogeografia , Roedores/anatomia & histologia
8.
Anat Rec (Hoboken) ; 292(9): 1240-5, 2009 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19711448

RESUMO

This special issue of The Anatomical Record explores the recent advances in the functional morphology and paleobiology of dinosaurs. Although Darwin did not study dinosaurs because paleontology was in its infancy a century and half ago, he considered both paleontology and anatomy as essential subjects for establishing the validity of evolution. The study of dinosaurs constitutes a vigorous subdiscipline within vertebrate paleontology, and anatomists and evolutionary functional morphologists constitute an especially creative subgroup within dinosaur paleontology. The collection of 17 papers presented in this issue encompass cranial anatomy, postcranial anatomy, and paleobiology of dinosaurs and other archosaurs. Soft tissue subjects include studies of brain structure, jaw adductor muscles, and keratinous appendages of the skull. Taxonomically, it includes four papers with a focus on theropods, including Tyrannosaurus, five papers dealing with ceratopsians, three papers on hadrosaurs, and one on ankylosaurs. Modern anatomical techniques such as CT scanning, finite element analysis, and high resolution histology are emphasized. The visual presentation of results of these studies is spectacular. Results include the first-ever life history table of a plant-eating dinosaur; a determination of the head orientation of Tyrannosaurus and its relatives based on interpretation of the semicircular canals. The claws of Velociraptor appear to best adapted for tree climbing, but not for horrific predatory activities. Pachyrhinosaurus evidently used its massive head for head butting. The tail club of the armored dinosaur Euoplocephalus had the structural integrity to be used as a weapon. The pages abound with insights such as these. Dinosaurs once dead for millions of years live again!


Assuntos
Anatomia/história , Anatomia/tendências , Dinossauros/anatomia & histologia , Dinossauros/fisiologia , Paleontologia/história , Paleontologia/tendências , Animais , Evolução Biológica , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Comunicação Interdisciplinar , Universidades/história , Universidades/tendências
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 104(13): 5510-5, 2007 Mar 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17372202

RESUMO

Kelba quadeemae, a fossil mammal from the Early Miocene of East Africa, was originally named on the basis of three isolated upper molars. Kelba has previously been interpreted as a creodont, a pantolestid, an insectivoran, and a hemigaline viverrid. The true affinities of this taxon have remained unclear because of the limited material and its unique morphology relative to other Miocene African mammals. New material of Kelba from several East African Miocene localities, most notably a skull from the Early Miocene locality of Songhor in Western Kenya, permits analysis of the affinities of Kelba and documents the lower dentition of this taxon. Morphological comparison of this new material clearly demonstrates that Kelba is a member of the order Ptolemaiida, a poorly understood group whose fossil record was previously restricted to the Oligocene Fayum deposits of northern Egypt. Phylogenetic analysis supports the monophyly of the Ptolemaiida, including Kelba, and recovers two monophyletic clades within the order. We provide new family names for these groups and an emended diagnosis for the order. The discovery of ptolemaiidans from the Miocene of East Africa is significant because it extends the known temporal range of the order by >10 million years and the geographic range by >3,200 km. Although the higher-level affinities of the Ptolemaiida remain obscure, their unique morphology and distribution through a larger area of Africa (and exclusively Africa) lend support to the idea that Ptolemaiida may have an ancient African origin.


Assuntos
Dente/anatomia & histologia , África , Animais , Osso e Ossos , Fósseis , História Antiga , Mamíferos , Paleodontologia/história , Paleontologia/história , Filogenia
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