The most comprehensive up-to-date & readable introduction to the field of human evolution. The ninth edition of Humankind Emerging tells the story of how when & why the human lineage developed from ape-grade ancestors. In Part I Chapters 1 & 2 present a short history of the rise of evolutionary theory & the science of genetics followed by a description of the various mechanisms that produce evolutionary change. In Part II Chapters 3-5put humans in their proper context among the primates first discussing those aspects of modern primate behavior that help to interpret human prehistory & then describing the fossil evidence for the early stages of primate evolution. In Part III Chapters 6 & 7 describe the australopiths-members of the subtribe Australopithecina & the first representatives of humans zoological tribe Hominini. Part IV consists of nine chapters that detail the anatomical cognitive & behavioral evolution of the genus Homo & its various premodern & modern species. Here the second hominin subdivision-the subtribe Hominina-is described & interpreted. The book ends with Part V in which Chapter 17 discusses modern human diversity the question of biological races of humans & the challenges facing humanity in the future. The current edition provides an absolutely up-to-date survey of the hominin fossil species including descriptions of the oldest members of the tribe-Sahelanthropus Orrorin & Ardipithecus kadabba (Chapters 6 & 7)-as well as the recently discovered dwarfed species from Indonesia Homo floresiensis (expanded post-script in Chapter 15). Updates of the taxonomic scheme for the human lineage bring the text into agreement with current paleoanthropological usage. Australopiths are assigned to the subtribe Australopithecina species of the genus Homo are placed in the subtribe Hominina & the two subtribes are combined to form the tribe Hominini. Great apes & hominins now are combined in the family Hominidae. The newest edition also expands the fossil & behavioral descriptions of Homo heidelbergensis & identifies this species as the first hominin type to show the hunting lifestyle." Speculations about societal changes that may have accompanied the beginning of the hunting way of life (Chapter 12) are updated. The latest studies of the neural regions & connections responsible for human speech & language (Chapter 13) are described as well. In-text citations for all source materials are provides as well as a full bibliography-features that allow for in-depth study. Over 30% of the references are from 2000 or later."