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The Ape in the Tree: An Intellectual and Natural History of Proconsul (2005)

por Alan Walker, Pat Shipman

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This book offers a unique insider's perspective on the unfolding discovery of a crucial link in our evolution: Proconsul, a fossil ape named whimsically after a performing chimpanzee called Consul. The Ape in the Tree is written in the voice of Alan Walker, whose involvement with Proconsul began when his graduate supervisor analyzed the tree-climbing adaptations in the arm and hand of this extinct creature. Today, Proconsul is the best-known fossil ape in the world. The history of ideas is set against the vivid adventures of Walker's fossil-hunting expeditions in remote regions of Africa, where the team met with violent thunderstorms, dangerous wildlife, and people isolated from the Western world. Analysis of the thousands of new Proconsul specimens they recovered provides revealing glimpses of the life of this last common ancestor between apes and humans. The attributes of Proconsul have profound implications for the very definition of humanness. This book speaks not only of an ape in a tree but also of the ape in our tree.… (mais)
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In 1903, Consul the chimpanzee performed at the Folies Bergère; he appeared in evening dress, played the piano, rode a bicycle, poured himself a drink, ate a meal with a knife and fork, undressed, stood on his head, and somersaulted into bed. (I can’t do a lot of those things. I’ll let you figure out which). He must have made quite an impression on Folies audiences (who, after all, probably hadn’t come there to see a chimp, even a disrobing one) because 30 years later an African fossil of a creature thought to be ancestral to chimpanzees received the name Proconsul africanus from the discoverer.


Alan Walker is a vertebrate paleontologist; Pat Shipman is his wife and a talented author; together they produced The Ape in the Tree. Shipman (who I am embarrassed to admit I once thought was male) is the author of the excellent Taking Wing, about Archaeopteryx; The Ape in the Tree is a similar thorough treatment of the history of Proconsul paleontology, the animal’s autecology, and its systematic position. There’s considerable technical detail, including diagrams of the width of the last caudal vertebrae (to aid in understanding how the animal bent to feed) and histograms of body mass based on femur length (to decide how many species of Proconsul existed. For those who might be interested in such things, the title is a pun; Proconsul is in the evolutionary “tree”, and the best fossils were found in, literally, a tree (the fossilized stump of a hollow tree that accumulated various animal remains). No weaknesses I noted; highly recommended. ( )
  setnahkt | Dec 20, 2017 |
Well written and interesting, but not a stunner. ( )
  ndpmcIntosh | Mar 21, 2016 |
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This book offers a unique insider's perspective on the unfolding discovery of a crucial link in our evolution: Proconsul, a fossil ape named whimsically after a performing chimpanzee called Consul. The Ape in the Tree is written in the voice of Alan Walker, whose involvement with Proconsul began when his graduate supervisor analyzed the tree-climbing adaptations in the arm and hand of this extinct creature. Today, Proconsul is the best-known fossil ape in the world. The history of ideas is set against the vivid adventures of Walker's fossil-hunting expeditions in remote regions of Africa, where the team met with violent thunderstorms, dangerous wildlife, and people isolated from the Western world. Analysis of the thousands of new Proconsul specimens they recovered provides revealing glimpses of the life of this last common ancestor between apes and humans. The attributes of Proconsul have profound implications for the very definition of humanness. This book speaks not only of an ape in a tree but also of the ape in our tree.

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