The recent revolution in molecular genetics, which has already made such
a significant impact in the biomedical sciences, is now becoming
established in biological anthropology. New techniques have enabled
anthropologists to study biological variation at the molecular level,
and a wealth of exciting information on human and non-human primate
populations is now becoming available for the first time. This volume
presents a selection of pioneering research studies in which molecular
techniques have been used to address key questions, for example about
the human genetic system, the geographical movements of human
populations in the past, and primate evolution. Providing not only a
timely overview of current research, this book also presents an insight
into the potential significance of molecular biology in the decades to
come, that will be of interest to all biological anthropologists as well
as molecular biologists, human geneticists, palaeontologists and
evolutionary biologists.