Original title: Transport potravy, nástrojů a potomků v evoluci člověka
Translated title: Transport of food, tools and offspring in human evolution
Authors: Kováčová, Katarína ; Hora, Martin (advisor) ; Rmoutilová, Rebeka (referee)
Document type: Bachelor's theses
Year: 2018
Language: slo
Abstract: Transport of food, tools and offspring is an important part of the life of many animal communities. The transport could cause a bipedalism and upright posture in a modern man. This bachelor thesis focuses on the description of the transport of food, tools and offspring in selected primate groups, thus providing a comprehensive picture of transport in the evolution of man. The thesis contains an overview of the different types of food transferred by primates, its obtaining, and the transport itself using mouth or limbs to the place of its processing or storage. In the thesis, a special attention is paid to the tools transmitted in the limbs or in the mouth to obtain and process food. The last chapter of the thesis refers that the cubs of primates can hold on their parents' coat, or their parent provides them support with their upper limbs. The thesis places also emphasis on transport of dead offspring with which young females train the transport of their cubs. Using available facts, we derived the possible ways how a burden could be transported by extinct species of hominins, because it is not possible to determine the exact transport mechanism from their skeletal remains. Keywords: transport, primate, care, food, stone tools, cub, nuts

Institution: Charles University Faculties (theses) (web)
Document availability information: Available in the Charles University Digital Repository.
Original record: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/98415

Permalink: http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-380635


The record appears in these collections:
Universities and colleges > Public universities > Charles University > Charles University Faculties (theses)
Academic theses (ETDs) > Bachelor's theses
 Record created 2018-06-28, last modified 2022-03-04


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