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654-307 Evolution and Human Origins | |
Credit Points | 12.5 |
HECS Band | 2 |
Coordinator | Dr D Young |
Prerequisites | Some 200-level subjects in a biological discipline (including psychology) or history and philosophy of science. Zoology 654-202 and 654-204 are recommended. |
Semester | 1 (view timetable) |
Contact | 36 lectures (three a week) and 6 hours excursion, tutorial or practical work |
Subject Description | This subject aims to provide students with an appreciation of the modern theory of evolution, as a basis for understanding biological diversity and adaptation, including a general understanding of the pattern and process of human evolution. Specific topics to be addressed will usually include the contribution of Darwin and Wallace; natural selection and adaptation; the roles of chance and constraint in evolution; the origin and extinction of species; adaptive radiation, with particular reference to the primates; the fossil record and major evolutionary transitions; the fossil evidence of human origins; and the origin and expansion of human populations and their consequences. |
Assessment | A 3-hour end-of-semester written examination; up to 3000 words of essay work and/or a report may be included in the assessment. |
Search : Index : Faculty of Science : Zoology
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Next 654-308 Conservation Biology
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