Allison, A.C. (1953). The sickle-cell trait in the mediterranean area. Man, 53,
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4 Hill, A.V.S., & Motulsky, A.G. (1999). Genetic variation and human disease: The role of natural selection. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Hill, A.V.S., Sanchez-Mazas, A., Barbujani, G., Dunston, G., Escoffier, L., Hancock, J., & al., e. (1999). Human genetic variation and its impact on public health and medicine. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Holmes, E.C. (1999). Molecular phylogenies and the genetic structure of viral populations. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Kluger, M., Kozak, W., Conn, C., Leon, L., & Soszynski, D. (1998). Role of fever in disease. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 856, Knapp, L.A. (2002). Evolution and immunology. Evolutionary Anthropology, Suppl 1, Kuzawa, C.W. (2005). The fetal origins of developmental plasticity: Are maternal cues reliable predictors of future nutritional environments? American Journal of Human Biology, 17(1), Kwiatkowski, D.P. (2005). How malaria has affected the human genome and what human genetics can teach us about malaria. American Journal of Human Genetics, 77, Livingstone, F.B. (1958). Anthropological implications of sickle cell gene distribution in west africa. American Anthropologist, 60(3), McKeown, T. (1998). Determinants of health. In P.J. Brown (Ed.), Understanding and applying medical anthropology (pp ). Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company.
5 McLean, A. (1999). Development and use of vaccines against evolving pathogens: Vaccine design. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Miller, S.K. (1993). Diseases that hark back to stone age lifestyle. New Scientist(1862), 10. Morton, D.J. (1926). The relation of evolution to medicine. Science, 64(1660), Nesse, R.M., & Williams, G.C. (1994). Why we get sick. The new science of darwinian medicine. New York: Vintage Books. Newton, P., & White, N. (1999). Malaria: New developments in treatment and prevention. Annual Review of Medicine, 50, Peacock, N. (1990). Comparative and cross-cultural approaches to the study of human female reproductive failture. In C.J. DeRousseau (Ed.), Primate life histoyr and evolution (pp ). New York: Wiley-Liss. Pike, I. (2000). The nutritional consequences of pregnancy sickness: A critique of a hypothesis. Human Nature, 11, Profet, M. (1992). Pregnancy sickness as adaptation: A deterrent t maternal ingestion of teratogens. In J.H. Barkow, L. Cosmides & J. Tooby (Eds.), The adapted mind: Evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Read, A.F., Aaby, P., Antia, R., Ebert, D., Ewald, P.W., Gupta, S., & al., e. (1999). What can evolutionary biology contribute to understanding virulence? In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Rosenberg, K. (1992). The evolution of modern human childbirth. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, 35,
6 Rosenberg, K., & Trevathan, W.R. (1996). Bipedalism and human birth: The obstetrical dilemma revisited. Evolutionary Anthropology, 4, Rosenberg, K., & Trevathan, W.R. (2002). Birth, obstetrics and human evolution. BJOG: an International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 109, Samson, M., Libert, F., Doranz, B.J., Rucker, J., Liesnard, C., Farber, C.-M., & al., e. (1996). Resistance to hiv-1 infection in caucasian individuals bearing mutant alleles of the ccr-5 chemokine receptor gene. Nature, 382, Simoons, F.J. (1981). Celiac disease as a geographic problem. In D. Walcher & N. Kretchmer (Eds.), Food, nutrition, and evolution (pp ). New York: Masson Publishing Company. Somer, E. (2001). The origin diet: How eating like our stone age ancestors will maximize your health. New York: Henry Holt. Strassman, B., & Dunbar, R. (1999). Human evolution and disease: Putting the stone age in perspective. In S. SC (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Trevathan, W.R. (1987). Human birth: An evolutionary perspective. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter. Trevathan, W.R. (1999). Evolutionary obstetrics. In W.R. Trevathan, E.O. Smith & J.J. McKenna (Eds.), Evolutionary medicine (pp ). New York: Oxford University Press. Weinberg, E. (1978). Iron and infection. Microbiological Reviews, 42(1), Weinberg, G., Friis, H., Boelaert, J., & Weinberg, E. (2001). Iron status and the severity of hiv infection in pregnant women. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 33,
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