10 results on '"Merritt SR"'
Search Results
2. THE SOUND AND THE FURY.
- Author
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DAVIS, JERRY C., SILVERMAN, RALPH, CRAIG, STEVEN, BURKE, STEPHANIE, SHELTON, J., JEDLICKA, DANIEL, THALER, MONA, FLINCHBAUGH JR, ROY B., SAND, GEORGES, ROBBINS, GORDON O., CLIFFORD, F. J., MERRITT SR., HOWARD A., FOWLER, ROBERT E., JAY WEST, JOHN, PARKES, KENNETH C., SEEBERG, R. JAMES, BROWN, FRANK E., GIBBS, LEON B., CLARK, LEROY D., and EBERHART, RICHARD
- Subjects
POLITICAL rights ,LSD (Drug) ,SPORTS car racing - Published
- 1963
3. The upper limb of Paranthropus boisei from Ileret, Kenya.
- Author
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Richmond BG, Green DJ, Lague MR, Chirchir H, Behrensmeyer AK, Bobe R, Bamford MK, Griffin NL, Gunz P, Mbua E, Merritt SR, Pobiner B, Kiura P, Kibunjia M, Harris JWK, and Braun DR
- Subjects
- Animals, Kenya, Fossils anatomy & histology, Hominidae anatomy & histology, Upper Extremity anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Paranthropus boisei was first described in 1959 based on fossils from the Olduvai Gorge and now includes many fossils from Ethiopia to Malawi. Knowledge about its postcranial anatomy has remained elusive because, until recently, no postcranial remains could be reliably attributed to this taxon. Here, we report the first associated hand and upper limb skeleton (KNM-ER 47000) of P. boisei from 1.51 to 1.53 Ma sediments at Ileret, Kenya. While the fossils show a combination of primitive and derived traits, the overall anatomy is characterized by primitive traits that resemble those found in Australopithecus, including an oblique scapular spine, relatively long and curved ulna, lack of third metacarpal styloid process, gracile thumb metacarpal, and curved manual phalanges. Very thick cortical bone throughout the upper limb shows that P. boisei had great upper limb strength, supporting hypotheses that this species spent time climbing trees, although probably to a lesser extent than earlier australopiths. Hand anatomy shows that P. boisei, like earlier australopiths, was capable of the manual dexterity needed to create and use stone tools, but lacked the robust thumb of Homo erectus, which arguably reflects adaptations to the intensification of precision grips and tool use. KNM-ER 47000 provides conclusive evidence that early Pleistocene hominins diverged in postcranial and craniodental anatomy, supporting hypotheses of competitive displacement among these contemporaneous hominins., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Comparative isotopic evidence from East Turkana supports a dietary shift within the genus Homo.
- Author
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Patterson DB, Braun DR, Allen K, Barr WA, Behrensmeyer AK, Biernat M, Lehmann SB, Maddox T, Manthi FK, Merritt SR, Morris SE, O'Brien K, Reeves JS, Wood BA, and Bobe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Diet, Fossils, Kenya, Mammals, Hominidae
- Abstract
It has been suggested that a shift in diet is one of the key adaptations that distinguishes the genus Homo from earlier hominins, but recent stable isotopic analyses of fossils attributed to Homo in the Turkana Basin show an increase in the consumption of C
4 resources circa 1.65 million years ago, significantly after the earliest evidence for Homo in the eastern African fossil record. These data are consistent with ingesting more C4 plants, more animal tissues of C4 herbivores, or both, but it is also possible that this change reflects factors unrelated to changes in the palaeobiology of the genus Homo. Here we use new and published carbon and oxygen isotopic data (n = 999) taken from large-bodied fossil mammals, and pedogenic carbonates in fossil soils, from East Turkana in northern Kenya to investigate the context of this change in the isotope signal within Homo. By targeting taxa and temporal intervals unrepresented or undersampled in previous analyses, we were able to conduct the first comprehensive analysis of the ecological context of hominin diet at East Turkana during a period crucial for detecting any dietary and related behavioural differences between early Homo (H. habilis and/or H. rudolfensis) and Homo erectus. Our analyses suggest that the genus Homo underwent a dietary shift (as indicated by δ13 Cena and δ18 Oena values) that is (1) unrelated to changes in the East Turkana vegetation community and (2) unlike patterns found in other East Turkana large mammals, including Paranthropus and Theropithecus. These data suggest that within the Turkana Basin a dietary shift occurred well after we see the first evidence of early Homo in the region.- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Hand grip diversity and frequency during the use of Lower Palaeolithic stone cutting-tools.
- Author
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Key A, Merritt SR, and Kivell TL
- Subjects
- Animals, Archaeology, Female, Hand, Humans, Male, Technology, Hand Strength, Hominidae physiology
- Abstract
The suite of anatomical features contributing to the unique gripping capabilities of the modern human hand evolved alongside the proliferation of Lower Palaeolithic flaked tool technologies across the Old World. Experimental studies investigating their potential co-evolution suggest that the use of flakes, handaxes, and other stone tools is facilitated by manipulative capabilities consistent with the evolutionary trajectory of the hominin hand during this period. Grip analyses have provided important contributions to this understanding. To date, however, there has been no large-scale investigation of grip diversity during flaked stone-tool use, empirical comparative analyses of grip use frequencies, or examination of ergonomic relationships between grip choice and stone tool type and form. Here, we conduct four experimental studies, using replica Lower Palaeolithic stone tools in a series of actualistic and laboratory-based contexts, to record grip type and frequency of grip use during 1067 stone tool-use events by 123 individuals. Using detailed morphometric data recorded from each tool, we demonstrate how grip choice varies according to the type and form of stone tool used, and how these relationships differ between tool-use contexts. We identify 29 grip types across all tool-use events, with significant differences recorded in their frequency of use dependent on tool type, tool form, and the context of use. Despite the influence of these three factors, there is consistency in the frequent use of a limited number (≤4) of grip types within each experiment and the consistent and seemingly forceful recruitment of the thumb and index finger. Accordingly, we argue that there are deep-rooted, ergonomically-related, regularities in how stone tools are gripped during their use, that these regularities may have been present during the use of stone tools by Plio-Pleistocene hominins, and any subsequent selective pressures would likely have been focused on the first and second digit., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Investigating hominin carnivory in the Okote Member of Koobi Fora, Kenya with an actualistic model of carcass consumption and traces of butchery on the elbow.
- Author
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Merritt SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Bone and Bones, Cattle, Fossils, Goats, Kenya, Carnivory, Diet, Hominidae physiology, Tool Use Behavior
- Abstract
Previous zooarchaeological analysis at Koobi Fora indicates that Okote Member hominins were the primary agents of bone assemblage formation, gained early access to large and small mammal flesh, and consumed both high- and low-ranked carcass parts. The discovery of additional butchered specimens prompted the re-analysis presented here of three large and well-preserved zooarchaeological assemblages from the Okote member, GaJi14, FwJj14N and FwJj14S, to revisit paleoecological hypotheses about tool-assisted carnivory. Cow and goat limb butchery documenting the skeletal location of cut marks created by skinning, defleshing, and disarticulation was used to build an actualistic model to infer hominin consumption of distinct carcass resources. Archaeological specimens were assigned to early (defleshing limbs), middle (defleshing ribs, viscera, vertebrae, and head) and late (metapodial tendon removal, element disarticulation, long bone fragmentation) carcass consumption stages, and the incidence of these butchery behaviors was examined for specimens and minimum number of element and individual aggregates. Elbow specimens, where traces of defleshing, disarticulation, and percussion co-occur, offer a sequential view of carcass consumption behaviors that is free from fragmentation bias. Classification trees populated with actualistic data were used to identify defleshing and disarticulation cut mark clusters on archaeological elbow portions by their location, cut mark count, median length, and median cross-sectional width. Actualistically-informed configurational analysis offers high-resolution behavioral reconstruction of the butchered sub-assemblage and should be integrated with assemblage-scale zooarchaeological methods. These experiments highlight the bias for detecting butchery traces of early carcass access, because defleshing cut marks are abundant and introduced to dense midshaft portions, whereas disarticulation cut marks are rare and occur on epiphyseal portions, which are often deleted by density-mediated destruction. Butchery trace interpretation across multiple analytical scales confirms a flexible carnivorous paleoecological role for Okote hominins that included primary and secondary access to carcass resources from large and small mammals., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Landscape scale heterogeneity in the East Turkana ecosystem during the Okote Member (1.56-1.38 Ma).
- Author
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Patterson DB, Braun DR, Behrensmeyer AK, Lehmann SB, Merritt SR, Reeves JS, Wood BA, and Bobe R
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, Biological Evolution, Geologic Sediments analysis, Hominidae, Kenya, Ecosystem, Fossils, Mammals classification, Plants classification
- Abstract
Placing the biological adaptations of Pleistocene hominins within a well-resolved ecological framework has been a longstanding goal of paleoanthropology. This effort, however, has been challenging due to the discontinuous nature of paleoecological data spanning many important periods in hominin evolution. Sediments from the Upper Burgi (1.98-1.87 Ma), KBS (1.87-1.56 Ma) and Okote (1.56-1.38 Ma) members of the Koobi Fora Formation at East Turkana in northern Kenya document an important time interval in the evolutionary history of the hominin genera Homo and Paranthropus. Although much attention has been paid to Upper Burgi and KBS member deposits, far less is known regarding the East Turkana paleoecosystem during Okote Member times. This study pairs spatially-resolved faunal abundance data with stable isotope geochemistry from mammalian enamel to investigate landscape-scale ecosystem variability during Okote Member times. We find that during this period 1) taxa within the East Turkana large mammal community were distributed heterogeneously across space, 2) the abundance of C
3 and C4 vegetation varied between East Turkana subregions, and 3) the Karari subregion, an area with abundant evidence of hominin stone tool manufacture, had significantly more C3 vegetation than regions closer to the central axis of the Turkana Basin (i.e., Ileret and Koobi Fora). These findings indicate that the East Turkana paleoecosystem during the Okote Member was highly variable across space and provided a complex adaptive landscape for Pleistocene hominins., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A new high-resolution 3-D quantitative method for identifying bone surface modifications with implications for the Early Stone Age archaeological record.
- Author
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Pante MC, Muttart MV, Keevil TL, Blumenschine RJ, Njau JK, and Merritt SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Multivariate Analysis, Tool Use Behavior, Archaeology methods, Bone and Bones anatomy & histology, Fossils anatomy & histology, Hominidae, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods
- Abstract
Bone surface modifications have become important indicators of hominin behavior and ecology at prehistoric archaeological sites. However, the method by which we identify and interpret these marks remains largely unchanged despite decades of research, relying on qualitative criteria and lacking standardization between analysts. Recently, zooarchaeologists have begun using new technologies capable of capturing 3-D data from bone surface modifications to advance our knowledge of these informative traces. However, an important step in this research has been overlooked and after years of work, we lack both a universal and replicable protocol and an understanding of the precision of these techniques. Here we propose a new standard for identifying bone surface modifications using high-resolution 3-D data and offer a systematic and replicable approach for researchers to follow. Data were collected with a white-light non-contact confocal profilometer and analyzed with Digital Surf's Mountains
® software. Our data show that when methods are standardized, results between researchers are statistically indistinguishable. Multivariate analyses using the measured parameters allow discrimination between stone tool cut marks and mammalian carnivore tooth marks with 97.5% accuracy. Application of this method to fossil specimens resulted in 100% correspondence with identifications made by an experienced analyst using macroscopic observations of qualitative features of bone surface modifications. High-resolution 3-D analyses of bone surface modifications have great potential to improve the reliability and accuracy of taphonomic research, but only if our methods are replicable and precise., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Adjustable release of mitomycin C for inhibition of scar tissue formation after filtration surgery.
- Author
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Merritt SR, Velasquez G, and von Recum HA
- Subjects
- Cell Proliferation drug effects, Cicatrix pathology, Glaucoma pathology, Glaucoma surgery, Humans, Cicatrix prevention & control, Drug Delivery Systems, Filtering Surgery, Glaucoma drug therapy, Mitomycin administration & dosage, Polymers
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to demonstrate a drug delivery system with the capacity to adjust the release of mitomycin C (MMC), based on polymer composition, and inhibit fibroblast proliferation to a better effect than is currently used in glaucoma filtration surgery. The polymer used in this work is made from the oligosaccharide cyclodextrin, from which others and we have demonstrated adjustable release of small molecule drugs due to specific molecular interactions or "affinity" between drug and the cyclodextrin polymer. To adjust release rate, cyclodextrin polymers were synthesized in either dimethylformamide (DMF) or dimethyl sulfoxide, (DMSO) at a crosslinking ratio of 1:0.16 or 1:0:32 (molecule of glucose: molecule of crosslinker). The polymers were then loaded with mitomycin C, dried, and release evaluated in a physiological environment. Drug release was determined by visible spectroscopy. Released aliquots of mitomycin C were incubated with 3T3 fibroblast cells to determine cytotoxic or inhibitory effect through a cell proliferation assay. We show that by using affinity between drug and polymer, we can adjust MMC release rates to be slower and more sustained than from conventional, diffusion-only polymers, for both the DMF polymers (p = 0.00526) and the DMSO polymers (p = 0.0113). The incorporated and released MMC maintains inhibition of fibroblast proliferation much longer than is possible with a one-time application. Affinity polymers with 1:0.16 and 1:0.32 crosslink ratio showed significant inhibition of proliferation for up to 100 h (p = 0.018 and p = 0.014 respectively). The use of our controlled drug delivery technology applied after surgery could have a greater therapeutic impact than the current one-time applications of MMC., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. An adolescent services plan to incorporate status offenders into the child welfare system.
- Author
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Bingham RL, Merritt SR, Johnson MA, Gerhard AJ, and Grant LJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child Guidance Clinics, Comprehensive Health Care, Humans, Pennsylvania, Referral and Consultation, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Juvenile Delinquency rehabilitation
- Abstract
A model plan is presented for adolescent services that would facilitate the current trend to shift troubled but nondelinquent youngsters from the juvenile justice system into the child welfare system.
- Published
- 1979
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