
| Erik Trinkaus |
| Media Assistance:
Neil Schoenherr News Writer; Assoc. Record Editor nschoenherr@wustl.edu (314) 935-5235 |
![]() |
| Trinkaus |
|
|
| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
|
Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 10. - Show More |
| Where's the beef? Ancient cave bears as omnivorous as modern bears, research suggests (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/10783.html) Jan. 8, 2008 --
|
||||
| Neandertal kin Studies affirm relationship between early humans, Neandertals (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/9520.html) June 14, 2007 --
|
||||
| Who's your ancestor? More human-Neandertal mixing evidence uncovered (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/8165.html) Nov. 9, 2006 --
|
||||
| Weird Science Modern Humans, not Neandertals, may be evolution's "odd man out" (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/7833.html) Sept. 22, 2006 --
|
||||
| New year, new Neandertal? Redating of the latest Neandertals in Europe (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/6339.html) Jan. 5, 2006 --
|
|
Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 10. - Show More |
| Clips: |
|
Showing Clips 1 through 3 of 14. - Show More |
| Computer 'Recreates' Neanderthal Speech
FoxNews.com April 17, 2008 -- No one is really sure what Neanderthals sounded like, or even if they could speak. But one Florida researcher thinks he can guess, by using ancient skeletons to reconstruct an approximation of the Neanderthal vocal tract -- and then having a computer recreate the sounds it would make. Neanderthals' inability to produce these vowels would have severely limited their ability to form and understand a complex language, McCarthy argues, though WUSTL anthropologist Erik Trinkaus, one of the world's leading experts on Neanderthals, disagrees. "Ultimately what is important is not the anatomy of the mouth, but the neuronal control of it," Trinkaus. |
| Neanderthals speak out after 30,000 years
New Scientist (UK) and FoxNews.com April 16, 2008 -- An anthropologist has used new reconstructions of Neanderthal vocal tracts to simulate the voice. He says the ancient human's speech lacked the "quantal vowel" sounds that underlie modern speech. WUSTL anthropologist Erik Trinkaus comments. |
| Study: Neanderthals Not Doomed by Skull Shape
FoxNews.com and 1 others March 25, 2008 -- WUSTL's Erik Trinkaus comments on a study that tries to refute the idea that natural selection caused skull differences between Neanderthals and modern humans. |
This research includes considerations of the "origins of modern humans" debate, the interpretation of the archeological record, and patterns of recent human anatomical variations. However, it has been principally through the analysis of human fossil remains that he has sought to shed light on these issues.
This research involves the analysis of the functional anatomy, life history patterns, and lesions of these prehistoric humans to assess differential levels and patterns of activities and stress. As such, this work has involved diverse areas of research, including biomechanics, bone biology, taphonomy, demography, pathology and recent human skeletal biology, in addition to traditional aspects of human paleontological analysis.
Until recently, most of these analyses have been concerned with the Neandertals, employing them as generally indicative of late archaic humans and as a mirror against which to see the emergence of modern human biology. As a result, we now know more about the paleobiology of the Neandertals than we do about earlier Pleistocene hominids or early modern humans. His research has therefore expanded to focus on the complex patterns of human evolutionary change through the Early and especially Middle Pleistocene, and on the paleobiology and behavior of early modern humans.
The latter includes analyses of early modern humans from Africa and East Asia but focuses on those from the Middle Paleolithic of the Near East (Qafzeh and Skhul) and the European early Upper Paleolithic. He is co-organizing and participating in an international team of specialists to describe and analyze the largest known sample of early modern human remains, those from Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov in southern Moravia, Czech Republic (appendicular remains and data).
A fossil catalogue with measurements of the remains has appeared (The People of the Pavlovian) and additional descriptions are in process. He is also the principal human paleontologist studying the early Upper Paleolithic (ca.25,000 B.P.) child's skeleton from the Abrido do Lagar Velho, Portugal, a specimen which indicates some degree of admixture between the Neandertals and early modern humans in Iberia (see the Instituto Português de Arquelogia Web site).
Trinkaus' contributions to his field were recognized in 1996 when he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Prolific in his writings, his research papers quickly become the raw material for textbooks. His publications include six books, three of them edited volumes, and more than 140 articles, chapters and reviews. He has organized and/or participated in nearly 40 national and international symposia, he serves on the advisory panel or editorial board of six journals, and is frequently quoted in the popular media.
Trinkaus is also an excellent and demanding teacher. His courses include classes on human paleontology, human functional anatomy, Paleolithic archeology and human biological variation.
Courses
Human paleontology, Human Functional Anatomy, Paleobiological analysis of skeletal remains, Paleoanthropology, Human Variation, The Neandertal Legacy
Selected Publications
Sladek, V., Trinkaus, E., Hillson, S.W. & Holliday, T.W.
2000 The People of the Pavlovian: Skeletal Catalogue and Osteometrics of the Gravettian Fossil Hominids from Dolni Vestonice and Pavlov. Dolni Vestonice Studies 5. Brno: Akademie ved Ceske republicky. pp. 244.
Trinkaus, E., Svoboda, J., West, D.L., Sladek, V., Hillson, S.W., Drozdova, E. & Fisakova, M.
2000 Human remains from the Moravian Gravettian: Morphology and taphonomy of isolated elements from the Dolni Vestonice II site. Journal of Archaeological Science. 27, 1115-1132. COMPLETE TEXT IN RTF FORMAT
Duarte, C., Maurício, J., Pettitt, P.B., Souto, P., Trinkaus, E., van der Plicht, H., & Zilhão, J.
1999 The early Upper Paleolithic human skeleton from the Abrigo do Lagar Velho (Portugal) and modern human emergence in Iberia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (USA) 96: 7604-7609.
Trinkaus, E. & Ruff, C.B.
1999 Diaphyseal cross-sectional geometry of Near Eastern Middle Paleolithic humans: The femur. Journal of Archaeological Science 26: 409-424.
Trinkaus, E. & Churchill, S.E.
1999 Diaphyseal cross-sectional geometry of Near Eastern Middle Paleolithic humans: The humerus. Journal of Archaeological Science 26: 173- 184.
Trinkaus, E., Ruff, C.B., Churchill, S.E., & Vandermeersch, B.
1998 Locomotion and body proportions of the Saint-Césaire 1 Châtelperronian Neandertal. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 95: 5836-5840.
Trinkaus, E.
1995 Neanderthal mortality patterns. Journal of Archaeological Science 22: 121-142.
Trinkaus, E., & Shipman, P.
1993 The Neandertals: Changing the Image of Mankind. New York: Alfred A. Knopf Pub.
Trinkaus, E.
1983 The Shanidar Neandertals. New York: Academic Press.
|
Related Information Related Links:
Related Groups: |
|