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Greatest Mysteries in Human Evolution. Solutions to Ancient Archaeological and Anthropological Anomalies

  • Book

  • September 2024
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5917447

Greatest Mysteries in Human Evolution: Solutions to Ancient Archaeological and Anthropological Anomalies uses the most updated research and data to examine human evolution and the unsolved answers of our evolutionary history. Written by an acclaimed pioneer in cognitive archaeology, this book begins with an assessment of Neanderthals, using historical and archaeological evidence to explore how and why they became extinct. It then moves to the scientific discovery of the Peking Man fossils and why the proof of a 700,000-year-old skull would try to be erased from evolutionary history. The book also explores the first traces of the creation and evolution of language, communication, human abstract thinking, and tool creation, presenting an approachable and important resource for researchers and students in evolutionary biology, cognitive archaeology, and similar studies of human evolution.

Table of Contents

1. Neanderthals Europe and Africa 2. Peking Man Asia 3. Mimbres North America 4. Ancient Egypt 5. The Evolution of Language 6. Cultural Explosion of 50,000 Years Ago 7. Abstract Thinking and Counting 8. Extinct Human Cousins 9. Brain Evolution from Neanderthals to Homo sapiens 10. Spheroids and Tool Creation

Authors

Frederick L. Coolidge CU Presidential Teaching Scholar and Co-Direct of Psychology Undergraduate Education, Psychology Department, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA. Dr. Frederick L. Coolidge is a Professor of Psychology and Co-Director of Undergraduate Education at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. He received his PhD in Psychology from the University of Florida. Dr. Coolidge specializes in cognitive archaeology, behavior genetics, cognitive evolution, paleopyschology, and evolutionary neuropsychology. He is the author of 12 published books on cognitive archaeology and evolutionary topics.