Prehistoric Mongoloid Dispersals
Online ISBN:
9781383023909
Print ISBN:
9780198523185
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book
Prehistoric Mongoloid Dispersals
Published online:
31 October 2023
Published in print:
7 December 1995
Online ISBN:
9781383023909
Print ISBN:
9780198523185
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Cite
Akazawa, Takeru, and Emoke J E Szathmary (eds), Prehistoric Mongoloid Dispersals (Oxford , 1995; online edn, Oxford Academic, 31 Oct. 2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198523185.001.0001, accessed 20 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This book takes a unique, multi-disciplinary, and international approach to the study of how and where the Mongoloid originated, and how the various groups adapted to living in different environments. By bringing to the model of Mongoloid migrations as many disciplines as possible - from molecular genetics to linguistics, archaeology to palaeoecology, the authors offer a comprehensive account of the evolution of Homo sapiens and the subsequent formation of the different races and ethnic groups.
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
Contents
-
Front Matter
-
1
Introduction: human evolution, dispersals, and adaptive strategies
Takeru Akazawa
-
Part Global visions of Mongoloid origins IS
Takeru Akazawa (ed.) andEmoke J E Szathmary (ed.) -
Part I Beginnings in east Asia
Takeru Akazawa (ed.) andEmoke J E Szathmary (ed.)-
5
Modern human origins and the dynamics of regional continuity
C Loring Brace
-
6
Cranial morphology of the Siberians and east Asians
Hajime Ishida andYukio Dodo
-
7
Dental characteristics of the Japanese population
Hirofumi Matsumura and others
-
8
Population genetic studies on national minorities in China
Keiichi Omoto and others
-
5
Modern human origins and the dynamics of regional continuity
-
Part II Conquest of Siberia and Alaska
Takeru Akazawa (ed.) andEmoke J E Szathmary (ed.)-
9
Ancient migrations from Asia to North America
Emoke J E Szathmary
-
10
Dispersal of the ALDH2 mutant Mongoloid populations
Shoji Harada
-
11
The Mammoth Steppe and the origin of Mongoloids and their dispersal
R Dale Guthrie
-
12
On the origin and dispersal of east Asian populations as viewed from HLA haplotypes
Katsushi Tokunaga and others
-
9
Ancient migrations from Asia to North America
-
Part I Peopling of the Americas
Takeru Akazawa (ed.) andEmoke J E Szathmary (ed.)-
13
What can be learned from hair? A hair record from the Mammoth Meadow locus, southwestern Montana
Robson Bonnichsen and others
-
14
Quaternary geology of the ice-free corridor: glacial controls on the peopling of the New World
Lionel E Jackson andAlejandra Duk-Rodkin
-
15
Ethnographic analogy and migration to the western hemisphere
Robert L Kelly
-
16
Environmental context for early human occupation in western North America
Judith A Willig
-
17
New assessments of early human occupations in the southern cone
Hugo Gabriel Nami
-
18
The first Americans: different waves of migration to the New World inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequence polymorphisms
Satoshi Horai and others
-
13
What can be learned from hair? A hair record from the Mammoth Meadow locus, southwestern Montana
-
Part Colonization of the Pacific
Takeru Akazawa (ed.) andEmoke J E Szathmary (ed.)-
19
Early agriculture and the dispersal of the southern Mongoloids
Peter Bellwood
-
20
Paleolithic colonization in Sahul land
J Peter White
-
21
The genetic prehistory of Australia and Oceania: new insights from DNA analyses
Susan W Serjeantson andX Gao
-
22
What is southeast Asian about Lapita?
Matthew J T Spriggs
-
23
Formation of the Japanese language in connection with Austronesian languages
Osamu Sakiyama
-
24
Adaptive voyaging and subsistence strategies in the early settlement of East Polynesia
Atholl J Anderson
-
19
Early agriculture and the dispersal of the southern Mongoloids
© Oxford University Press 1995
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