Hominid Origins in Africa

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Hominid Origins Introduction
Advertisements

Australopiths and Pre-Australopiths
Paranthropus robustus. Australopithecus africanus.
HUMAN EVOLUTION: GENUS AUSTRALOPITHECUS & PARANTHROPUS.
Human Evolution Chapter 17.
Primates Primates are an order of mammals which includes lemurs, monkeys, apes, and humans Where do we separate?
Ardipithecus ramidus Hominid who walked bipedally 4.4 mya Discovered in 1992 by Tim White in Aramis, Ethiopia (as yet largely unpublished) Distinct enough.
Human Evolution.
Chapter 11 Hominid Origins in Africa. Chapter Outline The Bipedal Adaptation Early Hominids from Africa (Pre- Australopithecus Finds) Australopithecus/Paranthropus.
Chapter 11 Hominid Origins in Africa. Bipedalism Human os coxae.
Chapter 8 Hominid Origins.
Chapter 9 The Earliest Dispersal of the Genus Homo: Homo erectus and Contemporaries.
HUMAN EVOLUTION: GENUS HOMO
Evolution of Hominins The Early Hominins: Bipedal Primates
The Evolution of Genus Homo
Physical Evolution of Human Species
Big Trends in Human Evolution. Introduction – Human Evolution  Mosaic Evolution: ________________________  With respect to human evolution: _____________________.
KEY CONCEPT Humans appeared late in Earth’s history.
Human Evolution Part II
Brain Size Cranial capacities 700 cm3 to 1250 cm3
Primitive Archaic Genus Homo  Modern human characteristics › Appeared at different times › Evolved at different rates  Extinct hominids show a mosaic.
Climate and Human Evolution; the last 4.6 billion years
Antiquity of Humanity Early Human Origins.
Hominid Evolution. When? Where? u Evolution Timeline Evolution Timeline.
K-T boundary Primate origin Primate Origins Challenge is to minimize speculation on things that do not fossilize. We live in the Cenozoic Era (past 65.
1 Human Evolution Chapter Human evolution Closest living relatives Fossil hominids (“missing links”) Origin and spread of Homo sapiens.
17 Outtakes. Hominids Family Hominids (Hominidae) Genus Australopithecus... Paranthropus... Homo...
Overview of Human Evolution Hominids Through Time.
Chapter 1 – The Beginnings of Civilization
What Traits Characterize Humans?
Australopithecus anamensis Named by Meave Leakey and colleagues in 1994 crania, teeth & postcrania 2 sites: Allia Bay & Kanapoi ca Ma.
Evolution Part 3 – Timeline and Human Evolution
Chapter 9 The Earliest Dispersal of the Genus Homo: Homo erectus and Contemporaries.
Evolution of Mankind By : Mathew Walker.
HUMAN EVOLUTION. Key Vocabulary Anthropoids – subgroup of primates Hominin (Hominid) – Paleoanthropology – Bipedal Brachiate.
BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths.
Prehistoric Cultures Class Slides Set # 09 Selected Major Discoveries / Events Tim Roufs’ section.
HOMINID EVOLUTION Phylogenetic tree to show the place of the family Hominidae in the animal kingdom.
Chapter 8 Primate and Hominin Origins. Ancestor to Primates? What is ancestral to all the critters under the Order Primates? Where all the humans, australopithicines,
Miocene Hominoid Distribution, From Fossils Thus Far Discovered.
Common ancestor. Contemporary animals Hominid Evolution: On The Origin of Humans.
Chapter 8 Hominid Origins.
Hominin Evolution. Pre-dating Australopithecus Hominins discovered in north-central and eastern Africa Bipedal – debatable in some species We will focus.
Understanding Physical Anthropology and Archaeology, 9th ed., p. 215 “Early Homo” -- The First Humans.
Paleoanthropology -The study of human origins and evolution -Paleoanthropologists use two terms that are easily confused: Hominoid: refers to the group.
Human Evolution Biology Mr. Young. Paleoanthropologist Scientist that studies human evolution from fossils.
Ardipithecus ramidus 4.4 mya (Another branch or root of all hominoids) New Genus = New Species Ardi.
Chapter 11 April 2, Climate and Human Evolution Global Warming and Mammal Size As temperatures increased, their body size decreased. Temperature-size.
Prehistoric People.
THE EVOLUTION OF GENUS HOMO 6 SPECIES OF HOMO 1. HOMO habilis mya 2. East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia) & southern Africa 3. Increased.
Biological Anthropology
The Evolution of Genus Homo. Fig. 7-8, p. 165 Homo habilis  “Handy man.”  The first fossil members of the genus Homo appearing 2.5 million years ago,
Homo ergaster WT Nariokotome, Kenya 1.6 mya
Antiquity of Humanity Basal Hominids Australopithecines and Paranthropus Early Homo Later Homo.
Lucy The First Family and Friends Understanding Physical Anthropology and Archaeology, 9th ed., p. 206.
Hosted by Ms. Behrens 1pt 2pt 4pt 3pt 4pt What’s up, prehistory? Before our genus Homo _____? Homo sapiens then and now 3pt 2pt 4pt 2pt 1pt 5pt 1pt.
Examine key traits that makes us human. Identify when and how they revealed in the fossil record. Identify who were the australopithecines, and what role.
The Rise of Humans The Scientific Account of Human Origins from 4 Million B.C. to 8000 B.C.
1. 2 Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012 Sylvia S. Mader Immagini e concetti della biologia.
Human Evolution 12.6 Laetoli Footprints Laetoli footprints clearly show that the creatures who made them were fully bipedal Big toe hardly diverges from.
Chapter 9 The Earliest Dispersal of the Genus Homo: Homo erectus and Contemporaries.
Chapter 10 Hominid Origins
Early Hominins Chapter 13.
Ardipithecus ramidus Hominid who walked bipedally 4.4 mya
Human Evolution
Hominid Evolution in Context
Hominids.
Homo erectus Discovered: 19th century in China, Java; later in Africa Age range: 1.8 my – 350,000 years Geographic distribution: China, S.E. Asia, E. Africa,
Evolution of Hominidae Earliest Hominids
Presentation transcript:

Hominid Origins in Africa Chapter 11 Hominid Origins in Africa

Major Events in Early Primate Evolution

Miocene Hominoid Distribution, From Fossils Thus Far Discovered

Miocene Fossil Hominoids African forms (23–14 m.y.a.) Western Kenya Primitive. European forms (16–11 m.y.a.) France, Spain, Italy, Greece, Austria, Germany, and Hungary. Asian forms (16–7 m.y.a.) Largest and most varied group Turkey through India/Pakistan and east to southern China.

Miocene Hominoid Fossils These are hominoids. Mostly large-bodied hominoids. Not (certainly) ancestral to any living form. One lineage that appears well established relates to Sivapithecus from Turkey and Pakistan. Evidence of definite hominids from the Miocene has not yet been indisputably confirmed.

Key Very Early Fossil Hominid Discoveries (pre-Australopithecus) Site Dates (m.y.a.) Hominids East Africa Middle Awash (Ethiopia; five localities) 5.8–5.2 Ardipithecus Aramis (Ethiopia) 4.4 Ardipithecus ramidus Central Africa Tugen Hills ~6.0 Orrorin tugenensis Toros-Menalla ~7.0 Sahelanthropus tchadenis

Features of Australopithecus Bipedal. Small brains. Large teeth, & thick enamel on the molars.

Laetoli Dated at between 3.5 and 3.7 m.y.a. Fossilized hominid footprints were found in an ancient volcanic bed. Bipedal locomotion.

Hadar (Afar Triangle) Dating range- 3.9 to 2.3 m.y.a. Recovered: "Lucy" 13 individuals, including 4 infants (social unit died at the same time). Some stone tools (2.5 m.y.a., earliest cultural evidence)

Koobi Fora (East Lake Turkana) Richest assemblage of Plio-Pleistocene hominids in Africa. Most date to 1.8 m.y.a., others to 3.3 m.y.a. 150 hominid specimens represent at least 100 individuals.

West Turkana Two important discoveries: Almost complete 1.6 m.y.a. Homo erectus adolescent. “The black skull”, a well-preserved 2.4 million year old skull.

Olduvai Gorge Louis and Mary Leakey excavations (1930's to early 1980). Evidence of over 150 species of extinct animals.

Estimated Body Weights and Stature in Plio-Pleistocene Hominids Male Female A. afarensis 99 lb 64 lb 59 in. 41 in. A. africanus 90 lb 65 lb 54 in. 45 in. South African “robust” 88 lb 70 lb 52 in. 43 in. East African “robust” 108 lb 75 lb 49 in. H. habilis 114 lb 62 in.

Groups of Plio-Pleistocene Hominids 200 individuals from South Africa Over 300 from East Africa. Divided into four broad groupings: Set I Basal Hominids. Set II Early Primitive Australopithecus. Set III Later, more derived Australopithecus. Set IV Early homo.

Set I. Basal Hominid (4.4 m.y.a.) Aramis- earliest and most primitive remains. Classified as Ardipithecus ramidus.

Set II. Early Primitive Australopithecus, 4.2-3.0 m.y.a. Australopithecus afarensis – Laetoli & Hadar hominids A. afarensis very primitive, criteria for classification as hominid is bipedalism.

Set III. Later, More Derived Australopithecus (2.5-1.0 m.y.a.) Robust Australopithecines Larger body size Small cranial capacities Very large, broad faces Massive back teeth and lower jaws Gracile Australopithecines Different face dentition

Set IV. Early Homo (2.4-1.8 m.y.a.) The earliest appearance of our genus, Homo may be as ancient as the robust Australopithecines. Leakey named these specimens Homo habilis ("handy man") H. habilis differs from Australopithecus in cranial cavity and dental proportions.