Неандертальцы: история несостоявшегося человечества
Hofreiter M., Stewart J. Ecological change, range fluctuations and population dynamics during the Pleistocene // CB 19. 2009. R584–R594.
Holliday T. W. Postcranial evidence of cold adaptation in European Neanderthals // AJPA 104. 1997. P. 245–258.
Holliday T. W. Neanderthals and modern humans: an example of a mammalian syngameon? // K. Harvati and T. Harrison (eds). Neanderthals Revisited: New Approaches and Perspectives. Dordrecht: Springer, 2006. P. 281–297.
Holloway R. L. The poor brain of Homo sapiens neanderthalensis: see what you please… // Delson E. (ed). Ancestors: The hard evidence. New York: Alan R. Liss, 1985. P. 319–324.
Holloway R. L., Broadfield D. C., Yuan M. S. Brain Endocasts: The Paleoneurological Evidence. (The Human Fossil Record, vol. III). Hoboken, N. J.: Wiley & Sons, 2004.
Holloway R. L. Brain fossils: Endocasts // L. R. Squire (ed). Encyclopedia of Neuroscience. Oxford: Academic Press, 2009. P. 353–361.
Holton N. E., Franciscus R. G. The paradox of a wide nasal aperture in cold adapted Neandertals: a casual assessment // JHE. 2008. N 55. P. 942–951.
Horan R. D., Bulte E., Shogren J. F. How trade saved humanity from biological exclusion: an economic theory of Neanderthal extinction // JEBO. 2005. N 58. P. 1–29.
Houghton P. Neandertal supralaryngeal vocal tract // AJPA. 1993. N 90. P. 139–146.
Howell F. C. The place of Neanderthal Man in human evolution // AJPA. 1951. N 9. P. 379–416.
Howell F. C. Pleistocene glacial ecology and the evolution of “classic” Neandertal man // SJA. 1952. N 8. P. 377–410.
Howell F. C. The evolutionary significance of variation and varieties of «Neanderthal» man // QRB. 1957. N 32. P. 330–347.
Howells W. W. Neanderthals: names, hypotheses, and scientific method // AA. 1974. N 76. P. 24–38.
Hrdlička A. The Neanderthal phase of man // JRAI. 1927. N 57. P. 249–274.
Hubbe M., Hanihara T., Harvati K. Climate signatures in the morphological differentiation of worldwide modern human populations // AR. 2009. N 292. P. 1720–1733.
Hublin J.-J. Quelques caractères apomorphes du crâne néandertalien et leur interpretation phylogenetique // CRASP. 1978. N 287. P. 923–926.
Hublin J.-J. Caractères dérivés de la région occipito-mastoïdienne chez les Néandertaliens // E. Trinkaus (ed). L’Homme de Néandertal. Vol. 3. L’Anatomie. Liège: ERAUL. 1988. P. 67–73.
Hublin J.-J. Climatic changes, paleogeography and the evolution of Neanderthals // T. Akazawa, K. Aoki, O. Bar-Yosef (eds). Neanderthals and Modern Humans in Western Asia. New York: Plenum Press, 1998. P. 295–310.
Hublin J.-J. Modern-nonmodern hominid interactions: A Mediterranean perspective // O. Bar-Yosef and D. Pilbeam (eds). The Geography of Neandertals and Modern Humans in Europe and the Greater Mediterranean. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000. P. 157–182.
Hublin J.-J. Neandertal as another humankind: where are we now? // TN. 2006. N 2. P. 55–59.
Hublin J.-J. Origine et évolution des Néandertaliens // B. Vandermeersch, B. Maureille (dir). Les Néandertaliens. Biologie et cultures. Paris: Éditions du CTHS, 2007. P. 95–107.
Hublin J.-J. The origin of Neandertals // PNAS. 2009. N 106. P. 16022–16027.
Hublin J.-J., Bailey S. E. Revisiting the last Neandetals // N. J. Conard (ed). When Neanderthals and Modern Humans Met. Tubingen: Kerns Verlag, 2006. P. 105–128.
Hublin J.-J., Weston D., Gunz P., Richards M., Roebroeks W., Glimmerveen J., Anthonis L. Out of the North Sea: the Zeeland Ridges Neandertal // JHE. N 57. 2009. P. 777–785.
Humphrey N. Cave art, autism, and the evolution of the human mind // CAJ. 1998. N 8. P. 165–191.
Hutchinson D. L., Larsen C. S., Choi I. Stressed to the max? Physiological perturbation in the Krapina Neandertals // CAn. 1997. N 38. P. 904–914.
Huxley T. H. Further remarks upon the human remains from the Neanderthal // NHR 1. 1864. P. 429–446.
Inizan M.-L., Roche H., Tixier J. Technology of Knapped Stone. Meudon: C. R. E. P., 1992.
Jaubert J., Maureille B., Turq A. A Stratigraphic and chronological revision of Neanderthal burials in Western Europe: Chronicle of a long-awaited aging // PA. 2010. A16.
Jelinek J. Neanderthal Man and Homo sapiens in Central and Eastern Europe // CAn. 1969. N 10. P. 475–503.
Jolly C. J. A proper study for mankind: Analogies from papionin monkeys and their implications for human evolution // YPA. 2001. N 44. P. 177–204.
Johanson D., Edgar B. From Lucy to Language. New York: A Peter N. Nevraumont Book/Simon & Schuster, 1996.
Jones M. Moving North: Archaeobotanical evidence for plant diet in Middle and Upper Paleolithic Europe // J.-J. Hublin, M. P. Richards (eds). The Evolution of Hominin Diets: Integrating Approaches to the Study of Palaeolithic Subsistence. Springer, 2009. P. 171–180.
Jones S. C. The Toba supervolcanic eruption: Tephra-fall deposits in India and paleoanthropological implications // M. D. Petraglia, B. Allchin (eds). The Evolution and History of Human Populations in South Asia. New York: Springer, 2007. P. 173–200.
Kay R. F., Cartmill M., Balow M. The hypoglossal canal and the origin of human vocal behavior // PNAS. 1998. N 95. P. 5417–5419.
Kelly R. L. The Foraging Spectrum. Diversity in Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1995.
Kimbel W. H. The species and diversity of Australopiths // Handbook of Paleoanthropology, vol. 3. Berlin; Heidelberg; New York: Springer, 2007. P. 1539–1573.
King W. The reputed fossil man of the Neanderthal // QJS. 1864. N 1. P. 88–97.
Kitchen A., Toups M. A., Light J. E., Reed D. L. Genetic analysis of human head and clothing lice indicates an early origin of clothing use in archaic hominins // AJPA. 2010. N 141 (Supplement 50). P. 143–144.
Kittler R., Kayser M., Stoneking M. Molecular evolution of Pediculus humanus and the origin of clothing // CB. 2003. N 13. P. 1414–1417.
Klaatsch H. Der Werdegang der Menschheit und die Entstehung der Kultur. Berlin: Deutsches Verlagshaus Bong und Co, 1920.
Klein R. G. The Human Career. Human Biological and Cultural Origins. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 1989.
Klein R. G. The archaeology of modern human origins // EA. 1992. N 1. P. 5–14.
Klein R. G. Anatomy, behavior, and modern human origins // JWP. 1995. N 9. P. 167–198.
Klein R. G. Southern Africa and modern human origins // Journal of Anthropological Research. 2001. N 57. P. 1–16.
Klein R. G. Out of Africa and the evolution of human behavior // EA. 2008. N 17. P. 267–281.
Koenigswald G. H. R. (ed). Hundert Jahre Neanderthaler. Cologne; Graz: Böhlau-Verlag, 1958.
Koller J., Mania D. High-tech in the Middle Paleolithic: Neanderthal-manufactured pitch identified // EJA. 2001. N 4. P. 385–397.
Krantz G. S. A reappraisal of neandertal taxonomy // J. L. Franzen (ed). 100 Years of Pithecanthropus. The Homo Erectus Problem. Frankfurt: E. Schweizerbart, 1994. P. 327–331.
Krause J., Lalueza-Fox C., Orlando L., Enard W., Green R. et al. The derived FOXP2 variant of modern humans was shared with Neandertals // CB. 2007a. N 17. P. 1–5.
Krause M., Orlando L., Serre D., Viola B. et al. Neanderthals in central Asia and Siberia // Nature. 2007b. N 449. P. 902–904.
Kuhn S. L., Stiner M. C. What’s a mother to do? The division of labor among Neandertals and modern humans in Eurasia // CAn. 2006. N 47. P. 953–980.
Lahr M. M., Foley R. A. Towards a theory of modern human origins: geography, demography, and diversity in recent human evolution // YPA. 1998. N 41. P. 137–176.