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Evolutionary biomechanics: selection, phylogeny, and constraint

Part of the Oxford series in ecology and evolution series
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Evolutionary biomechanics is the study of evolution through the analysis of biomechanical systems.

Its unique advantage is the precision with which physical constraints and performance can be predicted from first principles.

Instead of reviewing the entire breadth of the biomechanical literature, a few key examples are explored in depth as vehicles for discussing fundamental concepts, analytical techniques, and evolutionary theory.

Each chapter develops a conceptual theme,developing the underlying theory and techniques required for analyses in evolutionary biomechanics.

Examples from terrestrial biomechanics, metabolic scaling, and bird flight are used to analyse how physics constrains the design space that natural selection is free to explore, and how adaptive evolution findssolutions to the trade-offs between multiple complex conflicting performance objectives.

Evolutionary Biomechanics is suitable for graduate level students and professional researchers in the fields of biomechanics, physiology, evolutionary biology and palaeontology.

It will also be of relevance and use to researchers in the physical sciences and engineering.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0191009288 / 9780191009280
eBook (EPUB)
576.8
02/01/2014
England
English
176 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on print version record.