Amy L Rector
Arizona State University
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Featured researches published by Amy L Rector.
Journal of Human Evolution | 2010
Amy L Rector; Kaye E. Reed
The Western Cape region of South Africa is home to a unique type of mediterranean vegetation called fynbos, as well as some of the earliest sites of modern human occupation in southern Africa. Reconstructing the paleohabitats during occupations of these early anatomically modern Homo sapiens is important for understanding the availability of resources to the humans during the development of behaviors that are often considered advanced. These reconstructions are critical to understanding the nature of the changes in the environment and resources over time. Here we analyze the craniodental fossils of the larger mammals recovered from two Pleistocene assemblages in the Pinnacle Point complex, Mossel Bay, Western Cape Region, South Africa. We reconstruct the paleohabitats as revealed by multivariate analyses of the mammalian community structures. Pinnacle Point 30 is a carnivore assemblage and Pinnacle Point 13B includes early evidence of a suite of modern human behavior; together they present an opportunity to identify environmental change over time at a localized geographic scale. Further, this is the first such study to include dated Western Cape localities from Marine Isotope Stage 6, a time of environmental pressure that may have marginalized human populations. Results indicate that environmental change in the Western Cape was more complex than generalized C(4) grassland expansions replacing fynbos habitats during glacial lowered sea levels, and thus, resources available to early modern humans in the region may not have been entirely predictable.
Journal of Human Evolution | 2018
Amy L Rector; Marie Vergamini
It is suggested that joint architecture of the extant cercopithecid forelimb differentiates terrestrial from arboreal quadrupedal species. Linear dimensions of forelimb joint morphology have also been used to assign fossil species to locomotor categories. However, many primates use a mix of terrestrial and arboreal behaviors, which can be problematic when developing models of behavior reconstruction using morphological variation. The current study uses multivariate analyses to identify morphology related to substrate use in primates, including determination of semiterrestriality. Measurements collected from distal humeri and proximal ulnae of 49 extant cercopithecid primate species were selected based on studies indicating that they could individually predict substrate use. Analyses including one-way analysis of variance, principal components, and discriminant functions were conducted to assess their ability to differentiate between arboreal and terrestrial substrate use. The functions created in these analyses are then applied to data from fossil specimens from the Hadar sequence, Ethiopia, sampling both the Hadar and overlying Busidima Formations, to retrodict possible substrate behavior of fossil monkeys at Hadar through time. As this study is designed to identify function and behavior rather than phylogeny, the taxonomic assignment of the fossil specimens is sometimes uncertain, but substrate behavior can still be inferred. Results suggest that substrate use, including semiterrestrial behavior, in extant and extinct primates can be inferred successfully from multivariate analyses based on joint morphology of the monkey elbow. This study reveals that the ecological distribution of primarily terrestrial fossil primate species of the Hadar sequence is comparable to modern-day communities in habitats similar to those reconstructed for the Hadar members.
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2011
Thalassa Matthews; Amy L Rector; Zenobia Jacobs; Andy I.R. Herries; Curtis W. Marean
Journal of Human Evolution | 2010
Amy L Rector; Brian C. Verrelli
Archive | 2013
Kaye E. Reed; Lillian M. Spencer; Amy L Rector
The 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, New Orleans | 2017
Amy L Rector; Kaye E. Reed; Denise Su
The 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, New Orleans | 2017
Kelsey D O'Neill; Amy L Rector; Christine Steininger
The 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, New Orleans | 2017
Marie Vergamini; Amy L Rector; Kristi L Lewton
The 85th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Atlanta, GA | 2016
Kelsey D O'Neill; Amy L Rector
The 85th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Atlanta, GA | 2016
Amy L Rector; Kaye E. Reed; Samantha Meacham; Christine Steininger