Chimpanzees and human evolution /edited by Martin N. Muller, Richard W. Wrangham, and David R. Pilbeam.

Chimpanzees and human evolution /edited by Martin N. Muller, Richard W. Wrangham, and David R. Pilbeam. - Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, (c)2017. - 1 online resource (ix, 837 pages) : illustrations

Includes bibliographies and index.

Was the last common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans chimpanzee-like? -- Introduction: chimpanzees and human evolution / Reconstructing the last common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans / Equal, similar, but different: convergent bonobos and conserved chimpanzees / Chimpanzees and the evolution of human uniqueness -- Introduction: chimpanzees and human uniqueness / Mortality, senescence, and lifespan / Fertility and fecundity / Locomotor ecology and evolution in chimpanzees and humans / Evolution of the human dietary niche: initial transitions / Evolution of the human dietary niche: quest for high quality / From pan to man the hunter: hunting and meat sharing by chimpanzees, humans, and our common ancestor / The evolution of the human mating system / From chimpanzee society to human society: bridging the kinship gap / Violent cousins: chimpanzees, humans, and the roots of war / Cooperative and competitive relationships within sexes / Cooperation between the sexes / Sexual coercion in chimpanzees and humans / Tool use and manufacture in the last common ancestor of pan and homo / Cultural evolution in chimpanzees and humans / Chimpanzee cognition and the roots of the human mind / Ancestral precursors, social control, and social selection in the evolution of morals / Communication and language Martin N. Muller -- David R. Pilbeam and Daniel E. Lieberman -- Brian Hare and Richard W. Wrangham -- Martin N. Muller -- Michael D. Gurven and Cristina M. Gomes -- Melissa Emery Thompson and Peter T. Ellison -- Herman Pontzer -- Sherry V. Nelson and Marian I. Hamilton -- Rachel N. Carmody -- Brian M. Wood and Ian C. Gilby -- Martin N. Muller and David R. Pilbeam -- Bernard Chapais -- Michael leaves Wilson and Luke Glowacki -- Richard W. Wrangham and Joyce Benenson -- Adrian V. Jaeggi, Paul leaves Hooper, Ann E. Caldwell Hooper, Michael D. Gurven, Jane B. Lancaster and Hillard S. Kaplan -- Martin N. Muller -- Campbell Rolian and Susana Carvalho -- Joseph Henrich and Claudio Tennie -- Alexandra G. Rosati -- Christopher Boehm -- Katie E. Slocombe and Thom Scott Philips.

Although chimpanzees and other primates are frequently used as models to reconstruct the behavior of extinct human ancestors, this is rarely done in a consistent or methodologically rigorous fashion. This volume brings together leading scholars to explore how knowledge about chimpanzees can be used to understand both what is unique about our own species, and how these traits evolved. The first part of the book makes the case that the last common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans was chimpanzee-like. This inference is based not on an assumption that chimpanzees are a model species, but on morphological, developmental, and genetic data, together with evidence from the hominin fossil record. The second part of the book provides the first detailed record of the similarities and differences between humans and chimpanzees, including those in social system, mating system, diet, social behavior, hunting, tool use, culture, cognition, and communication.--



9780674982642


Chimpanzees--Behavior.
Human evolution.
Human behavior.
Social evolution.


Electronic Books.

QL737 / .C456 2017