One. Introduction: On the Absence of Geometry from Morphometrics.- First Part. The Measurement of Biological Shape.- Two. Shapes and Measures of Shape.- Three. Critique of an Applied Field: Conventional Cephalometrics.- Four. New Statistical Methods for Shape.- Second Part. The Measurement of Shape Change Using Biorthogonal Grids.- Five. The Study of Shape Transformation after D’Arcy Thompson.- Six. The Method of Biorthogonal Grids.- Seven. Examples of Biorthogonal Analysis.- Eight. Future Directions for Transformation Analysis.- Nine. Envoi.- Literature Cited.
P.I. Johnstone, R. Pare, R.D. Rosebrugh, D. Schumacher, R.J. Wood, G.C. Wraith, P. I. Johnstone, R. D. Rosebrugh, R. J. Wood, G. C. Wraith, P.I. Johnstone, R. Pare, P. I. Johnstone