ExLibris header image
SFX Logo
Title: Human Genetic Distance Studies: Present Status and Future Prospects
Source:

Annual Review of Anthropology [0084-6570] Jorde, L B yr:1985


Collapse list of basic services Basic
Full text
Full text available via Annual Reviews
GO
Full text available via Annual Reviews Back Volume Collection
GO
Document delivery
Request document via Library/Bibliothek GO
Users interested in this article also expressed an interest in the following:
1. McHenry, Henry M. "The pattern of human evolution: studies on bipedalism, mastication, and encephalization." Annual review of anthropology 11.1 (1982): 151-73. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
2. Heath, Kathleen Marie M. "Dichotomous male reproductive strategies in a polygynous human society: mating versus parental effort." Current anthropology 39.3 (1998): 369-374. Link to SFX for this item
3. Kirkpatrick, M. "Evolution of female choice and male parental investment in polygynous species: the demise of the sexy son" ." The American naturalist 125.6 (1985): 788-810. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
4. Herculano Houzel, S. "The remarkable, yet not extraordinary, human brain as a scaled-up primate brain and its associated cost.(Author abstract)." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109.26 (2012): 10661-. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
5. Del Giudice, M. "Sex, attachment, and the development of reproductive strategies." The Behavioral and brain sciences 32.1 (2009): 1-21. Link to SFX for this item
6. Clignet, R. "For a revisionist theory of human polygyny." Signs 6.3 (1981): 445-468. Link to SFX for this item
7. Chaplin, G. "Origin of habitual terrestrial bipedalism in the ancestor of the Hominidae." Journal of human evolution 24.4 (1993): 259-80. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
8. Lovejoy, O. "The Origin of Man." Science 211.4480 (1981): 341-350. Link to SFX for this item
9. Deacon, Terrence W. "What makes the human brain different?" Annual review of anthropology 26.1 (1997): 337-357. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
10. Aiello, Leslie C. "The expensive-tissue hypothesis: the brain and the digestive system in human and primate evolution." Current anthropology 36.2 (1995): 199-221. Link to SFX for this item
11. Gangestad, Jeffry A W. "Women's Preferences for Male Behavioral Displays Change Across the Menstrual Cycle." Psychological science 15.3 (2004): 203-206. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
12. Dudgeon, Matthew R. "Men's influences on women's reproductive health: medical anthropological perspectives." Social science & medicine 59.7 (2004): 1379-95. Link to SFX for this item
13. Bunn, Henry T. "Hunting and scavenging by Plio-Pleistocene hominids: nutritional constraints, archaeological patterns, and behavioural implications." Journal of Archaeological Science 20.4 (1993): 365-398. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
14. Navarrete, A. "Energetics and the evolution of human brain size." Nature 480.7375 (2011): 91-93. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
15. Grossman, H. "On diet, energy metabolism, and brain size in human evolution." Current anthropology 37.1 (1996): 125-129. Link to SFX for this item
16. Schmitt, D. "Insights into the evolution of human bipedalism from experimental studies of humans and other primates." The journal of experimental biology 206.9 (2003): 1437-1448. Link to SFX for this item
17. Volpe, A. "Attachment and sexual strategies." The Behavioral and brain sciences 32.1 (2009): 43-44. Link to SFX for this item
18. Hunt, Kevin D D. "The evolution of human bipedality: Ecology and functional morphology." Journal of human evolution 26.3 (1994): 183-202. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
19. Cunnane, S C C. "Hunter-gatherer diets-a shore-based perspective." The American journal of clinical nutrition 71.3 (2001): 1584-8. Link to SFX for this item
20. Hladik, Jane M. "On Diet and Gut Size in Non-human Primates and Humans: Is There a Relationship to Brain Size?" Current anthropology 40.5: 695-697. Link to SFX for this item
View More...
View Less...
Select All Clear All

Expand list of advanced services Advanced