Human Population Biology: A Transdisciplinary Science

Front Cover
Michael A. Little, Jere D. Haas
Oxford University Press, 1989 - Science - 338 pages
This book is a careful integration of the social and biological sciences, drawing on anthropology, biology, human ecology and medicine to provide a comprehensive understanding of how our species adapts to natural and man-made environments. Part I presents techniques to adapt and apply demographic methods to small populations, particularly important for studying non-Western populations. Part II discusses the relationship of medical genetics to human adaptability and patterns of disease in non-Western populations. Part III covers capacity, climatic stress, and nutrition. Part IV presents methods for growth assessment and prediction and addresses the topic of aging. The final section, Part V, presents integrated case studies of human adaptation to high altitude, and patterns of modernization and stress resulting from cultural change.
 

Contents

DEMOGRAPHY AND POPULATION
6
Demographic Studies and Human Population Biology
45
Human Adaptability and Medical Genetics
69
Natural Experimental Models in Human Biology Epidemiology
82
PHYSIOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
113
Climatic Physiology
132
Nutrition and Human Population Biology
152
THE LIFE CYCLE
171
TRANSDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO
201
Development of Chest Size and Lung Function at High Altitude
222
Paradigm or Enigma?
239
Causes and Consequences
263
Catecholamines and Stress
280
Reflections on Adaptive and Ecological Models
296
Index
320
Copyright

The Human Population Biology of Aging
189

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