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General Principles of Evolutionary Morphology

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Handbook of Paleoanthropology
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Abstract

Anthropologists analyzing morphology for phylogenetic, functional, or behavioral purposes are confronted by a plethora of obstacles. Morphology is not free to vary but is subject to a number of constraints, which may be historical, developmental, and/or functional, while equivalency in function can be achieved by different means. This, together with the fact that the fossil record is scant, confounds meaningful interpretation of phylogenetic pathways and the reconstruction of function and behavior from fossilized remains. To overcome these difficulties, paleoanthropology is becoming increasingly inter- and multidisciplinary, whereby researchers draw on, and incorporate, approaches and findings obtained in other, sometimes very diverse, disciplines. This contribution briefly reviews the constraints acting on morphology, the limitations faced when interpreting form/function and behavior from morphology, and the different approaches currently explored in paleoanthropology to obtain a better understanding of hominin paleobiology. While offering exciting new possibilities, researchers should however be mindful of the limitations inherent in new technologies.

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Acknowledgments

I thank John Skedros and Tim Bromage for permission to reproduce their figures. This chapter is the result of various research projects, funded mainly by the Natural Environment Research Council (UK), The Leverhulme Trust (UK) and the Ministerio de EconomÚa y Competitividad (Spain).

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Correspondence to Gabriele A. Macho .

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Macho, G.A. (2015). General Principles of Evolutionary Morphology . In: Henke, W., Tattersall, I. (eds) Handbook of Paleoanthropology. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39979-4_26

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