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Pesticide Residues and Food Safety: A Harvest of Viewpoints (Acs Symposium Series)
Manufacturer: An American Chemical Society Publication ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 0841218897 |
Book Description
In this new volume a variety of experts, including chemists, toxicologists, growers, educators, regulators, food processors and distributors, representatives of consumer groups, and reporters, address the major issues surrounding food safety and pesticide residues. Its 37 chapters are divided into sections covering pesticide use, alternative agriculture production, exposure assessment, risk assessment, risk management, and legislative and regulatory issues. An introductory section defines the scope of the issues and a concluding section represents comments from a panel discussion on communicating risk to the public. This collection, which presents many divergent viewpoints from individuals and organizations directly involved with pesticides, offers valuable insights into the issues.
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Ice Age Peoples Of North America: Environments, Origins, and Adaptations
Manufacturer: Texas A&M University Press ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items:
ASIN: 1585443689 |
Book Description
This volume provides an up-to-date summary of important new discoveries from Northeast Asia and North America that are changing perceptions about the origin of the First Americans. Even though the peopling of the Americas has been the focus of scientific investigations for more than half a century, there is still no definitive evidence that will allow specialists to say when the First Americans initially arrived or who they were.The nineteen papers collected here provide regional archaeological syntheses and address such topics as ice marginal dynamics, the impact of plant nutrients in glacial margins, and periglacial ecology of large mammals. The concluding chapter discusses conceptual frameworks used to explain the peopling of the Americas.
This volume provides an up-to-date summary of important new discoveries earlier than ten thousand years old from Northeast Asia and North America that are changing our perceptions about the origin of the First Americans. It offers a detailed compendium of late-Pleistocene Paleoamerican archaeological records that can serve as a foundation of existing knowledge in this field and for creating the next generation of models that seek to explain the peopling of the Americas.
Customer Reviews:
Review of "Ice Age People of North America ...".......2000-06-30
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Evolving Health: The Origins of Illness and How the Modern World is Making Us Sick
Noel T. Boaz Manufacturer: Wiley ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items:
ASIN: 0471352616 |
Book Description
Human illnesses can be understood as damage to those adaptations that we took on at various stages in our evolution from pre-life molecules to modern Homo sapiens. Preventing these illnesses entails avoiding what causes the damage-- which too frequently are the everyday hazards of twenty-first-century life, as the chart below shows:|
Level of Evolution |
Cause of adaptive failure |
resulting disease or problem |
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Pre-life |
Environmental poisons |
Certain birth defects |
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Single cell (bacteria and amoeba-like) |
Viral infection |
Colds/flu/HIV |
|
Morula (sponge-like) |
Cellular stress |
Cancer |
|
Chordate |
Physical stress |
Back pain |
|
Fish |
Excess dietary salt |
Hypertension/heart disease |
|
Amphibian |
Tobacco smoke |
Lung cancer/emphysema |
|
Lower primate |
Excess dietary sugar |
Diabetes mellitus |
|
Higher primate |
Vitamin C deficiency |
Scurvy |
|
Ape |
Excess dietary protein |
Gout |
|
Homo sapiens |
Reduced dietary variety |
Nutritionaldiseases/food allergies |
Customer Reviews:
This book should be required reading in all the schools.......2007-09-30
Evolution in Health and Disease.......2005-09-18
Excellent introduction to the ideas of evolutionary medicine.......2003-03-10
Another important idea is to look, in so far as possible, to our adaptations as evolutionary beings to see what we might be doing wrong today. For example, grasses with plump seeds of carbohydrates were in short supply before the advent of agriculture about 10,000 years ago. There were wheats and ryes, wild oats and such, but their seeds were relatively small and required a lot of labor to harvest. Consequently, our ancestors on the savannahs and in the woodlands ate grain carbohydrates in small amounts. Now, of course, grains--especially rice, wheat and corn--are the staple foods everywhere in the world and we eat massive amounts of them.
Is this a problem? As Professor Boaz points out, evolutionary medicine suggests that it is. We are "carbohydrate intolerant" (Boaz uses the term "glucotoxicity," page 133) and cannot shut down our appetite for all the carbohydrates so tantalizingly available to us. They are especially enthralling when served up with salt and fats.
In the prehistory there were no supermarkets open 24-hours a day. Instead there were freezing winters and droughts that might last for months or more, sure to visit almost every human eventually. So when there was a bountifulness in the land we chowed down big time. And those of us who had the ability to put on fat could live out the times of famine better than any prehistoric runway model. And so our chubby guy- or chubby gal-genes were favored. Boaz calls this the "thrifty genotype."
However that virtue has become a fault. What to do? Boaz recommends exercise, for one thing. In the pre-history our ancestors managed to walk all the way around the world. They had no cars or easy chairs. That we can solve our fat problem by looking at the way our ancestors lived and emulate them, is the somewhat bitter pill of this book. And, by the way, this "medicine" (hard to take, as we all know) also works against heart attacks, gout and other modern diseases.
Boaz has gone to some considerable trouble to associate various "diseases" with 17 evolutionary levels of human structure and function. (There's a table on pages 19-25.) These levels are like the idea that "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" in that some of the levels are similar to those stages in the embryo's development from single cell through bony fish and amphibian to mammal, all the way to us. What Boaz is adding here is the idea that certain diseases are associated with each level of development. For example, emphysema is associated with the amphibian level of adaptation while viral infections go all the way back to when our ancestors were just single cells.
This scheme is useful in helping us to understand disease. It is even helpful in treatment. But Boaz's formulation is no magic pill or cure-all. For the chronic diseases that plague those of us in the developed world there is no easy cure. Boaz recognizes a "discordance" between our evolutionary selves and the modern environment that is leading to these diseases. He uses a concept he calls "adaptive normality" that can guide us away from the discordance.
This is a very readable book requiring no prior expertise. It is obvious that Boaz wanted to reach the educated lay person with his ideas. For those of you new to the idea of evolutionary medicine, this will be an exciting book. Boaz does an excellent job of teaching us is how to think from an evolutionary perspective, which is something we all need to do.
Another interesting book on this subject is Why We Get Sick: The New Science of Darwinian Medicine (1994) by Randolph M. Nesse and George C. Williams which I also recommend.
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The Social Origins of Christian Architecture: Building God's House in the Roman World : Architectural Adaptation Among Pagans, Jews, and Christians (Harvard Theological Studies)
L. Michael White Manufacturer: Trinity Press International ProductGroup: Book Binding: Paperback ASIN: 156338180X |
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Ethnic Origins: The Adaptation of Cambodian and Hmong Refugees in Four American Cities (American Sociological Association Rose Monographs)
Jeremy Hein Manufacturer: Russell Sage Foundation Publications ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover Similar Items: ASIN: 0871543362 |
Book Description
Immigration studies have increasingly focused on how immigrant adaptation to their new homelands is influenced by the social structures in the sending society, particularly its economy. Less scholarly research has focused on the ways that the cultural make-up of immigrant homelands influences their adaptation to life in a new country. In Ethnic Origins, Jeremy Hein investigates the role of religion, family, and other cultural factors on immigrant incorporation into American society by comparing the experiences of two little-known immigrant groups living in four different American cities not commonly regarded as immigrant gateways.Ethnic Origins provides an in-depth look at Hmong and Khmer refugeespeople who left Asia as a result of failed U.S. foreign policy in their countries. These groups share low socio-economic status, but are vastly different in their norms, values, and histories. Hein compares their experience in two small townsRochester, Minnesota and Eau Claire, Wisconsinand in two big citiesChicago and Milwaukeeand examines how each group adjusted to these different settings. The two groups encountered both community hospitality and narrow-minded hatred in the small towns, contrasting sharply with the cold anonymity of the urban pecking order in the larger cities. Hein finds that for each group, their ethnic background was more important in shaping adaptation patterns than the place in which they settled. Hein shows how, in both the cities and towns, the Hmong's sharply drawn ethnic boundaries and minority status in their native land left them with less affinity for U.S. citizenship or "Asian American" panethnicity than the Khmer, whose ethnic boundary is more porous. Their differing ethnic backgrounds also influenced their reactions to prejudice and discrimination. The Hmong, with a strong group identity, perceived greater social inequality and supported collective political action to redress wrongs more than the individualistic Khmer, who tended to view personal hardship as a solitary misfortune, rather than part of a larger-scale injustice.
Examining two unique immigrant groups in communities where immigrants have not traditionally settled, Ethnic Origins vividly illustrates the factors that shape immigrants' response to American society and suggests a need to refine prevailing theories of immigration. Hein's book is at once a novel look at a little-known segment of America's melting pot and a significant contribution to research on Asian immigration to the United States.
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Adaptation and origin in the plant world (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication)
Emmett Virgil Martin Manufacturer: Carnegie institution of Washington ProductGroup: Book Binding: Unknown Binding ASIN: B0008672J8 |
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Adaptation to Life at High Salt Concentrations in Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya (Cellular Origin, Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology) (Cellular ... Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology)
Manufacturer: Springer ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 1402036329 |
Product Description
This book intends to provide an overview of current research on halophilic microorganisms, highlighting the diversity of life forms adapted to tolerate high salt concentrations and low water activities. Most of the 35 chapters are based on lectures presented during the international symposium "Halophiles 2004", held in Ljubljana, Slovenia, in September 2004. Descriptions of the diverse high-salt environments in which halophiles are found are followed by sections devoted to the properties of halophilic Archaea, of halophilic and halotolerant Bacteria, and of different groups of salt-loving Eukarya, including fungi, algae and protozoa. Extensive information is provided about fungi adapted to life at high salt concentrations, a group that was poorly known until very recently. This volume is intended for researchers and students interested in a wide range of disciplines in the life sciences: from microbial ecology and adaptation of microorganisms to life in extreme environments to genomics, biotechnology, and astrobiology.
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Clovis: Origins and Adaptations (Peopling of the Americas Publications. Edited Volume Series)
Robson Bonnichsen Manufacturer: Center for the Study of the First American ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 0912933089 |
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The Colonization of Land: Origins and Adaptations of Terrestrial Animals
Colin Little Manufacturer: Cambridge University Press ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 0521252180 |
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The First Americans: Origins, Affinities, and Adaptations
Laughlin Manufacturer: Gustav Fischer ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 0895741032 |
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Journey to Diverse Microbial Worlds - Adaptation to Exotic Environments (CELLULAR ORIGIN AND LIFE IN EXTREME HABITATS Volume 2) (Cellular Origin, Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology)
Manufacturer: Springer ProductGroup: Book Binding: Hardcover ASIN: 0792360206 |
Book Description
In this Journey to Microbial Worlds we present the diversity of microorganisms, from the state of fossil microbes in Archaean age rocks to the possibilities of extraterrestrial life. This volume discusses the extremophiles living in harsh environments (from our anthropocentric point) and describes them in considerable detail. Some chapters also review topics such as symbiosis, bacterial luminescence, methanogens, and petroleum-grown cells. The final chapters of this book shed new light on astrobiology and speculate on extremophiles as candidates for extraterrestrial life. All chapters are updated to the latest research level.Books:
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