Morphogenesis and Evolution
Morphogenesis and Evolution
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Author(s): Thomson, Keith Stewart
ISBN No.: 9780195049121
Pages: 168
Year: 198809
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 75.90
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

"An admirable job.examines current concepts of morphogenesis, including pattern formation in limbs of control animals as well as mutants such as eudiplopodia, luxate, brachypod, and nanomely. His discussion of Waddington's 'canalized landscape' metaphor. is particularly cogent.The bibliography, index, and references are complete, current, and comprehensive. Should be purchased by academic libraries as a thorough interdisciplinary discussion ofan intensely interesting and emerging area." --Choice"Views the regular appearance of morphological gaps as a phenomenon worthy of a causal explanation which goes beyond the negative evidence of the incompleteness of the fossil record. I believe that this message deserves a wide audience among all those readers interested in the modern expansion of evolutionary theory.


" --American Scientist"Represents a serious attempt to grapple with the overall problem of the role of developmental mechanisms in evolution. It is a tightly condensed discourse on an extremely complicated topic, and it is well worth reading." --BioScience"Thomson's presentation is often circumspect and above all lucid. He integrates classical ideas from morphology and paleontology with recent work in experimental embryology and, to a lesser extent, molecular genetics . This concise introduction to the potential role of ontogeny in evolution deserves to be widely read." --Quarterly Review of Biology"[The author] shows an elegant style of explanation . He clearly gives the evolutionary biologist pertinent developmental data in a form that can be easily understood." --American Zoologist"An admirable job.


examines current concepts of morphogenesis, including pattern formation in limbs of control animals as well as mutants such as eudiplopodia, luxate, brachypod, and nanomely. His discussion of Waddington's 'canalized landscape' metaphor. is particularly cogent.The bibliography, index, and references are complete, current, and comprehensive. Should be purchased by academic libraries as a thorough interdisciplinary discussion ofan intensely interesting and emerging area." --Choice"Views the regular appearance of morphological gaps as a phenomenon worthy of a causal explanation which goes beyond the negative evidence of the incompleteness of the fossil record. I believe that this message deserves a wide audience among all those readers interested in the modern expansion of evolutionary theory." --American Scientist"Represents a serious attempt to grapple with the overall problem of the role of developmental mechanisms in evolution.


It is a tightly condensed discourse on an extremely complicated topic, and it is well worth reading." --BioScience"Thomson's presentation is often circumspect and above all lucid. He integrates classical ideas from morphology and paleontology with recent work in experimental embryology and, to a lesser extent, molecular genetics . This concise introduction to the potential role of ontogeny in evolution deserves to be widely read." --Quarterly Review of Biology"[The author] shows an elegant style of explanation . He clearly gives the evolutionary biologist pertinent developmental data in a form that can be easily understood." --American Zoologist.


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