Mark Pagel, "Encyclopedia of Evolution (2 volumes set)"
2002 | ISBN-10: 0195122003 | 1326 pages | PDF | 150 MB
2002 | ISBN-10: 0195122003 | 1326 pages | PDF | 150 MB
This bookis an authoritative and comprehensive guide to evolutionary biology. In 370 articles written by leading experts, it provides biographies of leading figures, and information about the field's history, its essential concepts and theories, methods, models, and findings.
Review
From the classic work of Darwin to current developments in such fields as psychology and economics, evolutionary biology is an increasingly powerful tool for understanding the natural world. Here in two volumes is a comprehensive, accessible, and authoritative guide to what we know about evolutionary biology, from the origins of species to the selfish gene and beyond. The Encyclopedia is available in print and as an e-reference text from Oxford's Digital Reference Shelf.
The Encyclopedia of Evolution covers the essentials of evolutionary biology in 370 original articles written by leading experts. The articles cover basic concepts and theories; models, methods, and findings; schools of thought; current controversies; biographies; and more.
The Encyclopedia covers evolutionary thought in genetics, animal behavior, and every area of the life sciences, as well as in anthropology, psychology, linguistics, sociology, economics, medicine, philosophy, and other fields. There are hundreds of tables, charts, graphs, maps and other illustrations, bibliographies, cross-references and and index.
Designed for students and teachers in both high schools and colleges and universities, and scholars and scientists in the natural and social sciences, the Encyclopedia of Evolution will be the first point of access to this growing body of knowledge.
'A key source for researchers, as well as for students and teachers … this is likely to be one of the most widely plagiarized books in the history of evolutionary biology.' (Joel Peck, Nature)