Biological Anthropology

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why evolution does not mean we came from MONKEYS…
Advertisements

Hominid Evolution.
The Incredible Journey
Australopiths and Pre-Australopiths
Analysis of Primates Comparisons of Human, Ape, and Australopithecine.
Chapter 7 The First Bipeds.
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ramidus Hominid who walked bipedally 4.4 mya Discovered in 1992 by Tim White in Aramis, Ethiopia (as yet largely unpublished) Distinct enough.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. Bipedalism Human os coxae.
EARLY HOMINID EVOLUTION:
Evolution of Hominins The Early Hominins: Bipedal Primates
Primates BIO 2215 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson.
Human Evolution Part II
Section 4 Primates & Human Origins
Hominid Origins in Africa
Lab 2: Hominid Anatomy Key features to know Modified from
Human Evolution. Did we evolve from apes? Humans DID NOT evolve from apes we have a common ancestor.
Antiquity of Humanity Early Human Origins.
8 mya: fossil apes 3.5 mya: Australopithecus afarensis Cimpanzee-human divergence estimated from genetic data at around 5 mya. Gap in fossil record when.
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.
17 Outtakes. Hominids Family Hominids (Hominidae) Genus Australopithecus... Paranthropus... Homo...
What Traits Characterize Humans?
Australopithecus anamensis Named by Meave Leakey and colleagues in 1994 crania, teeth & postcrania 2 sites: Allia Bay & Kanapoi ca Ma.
GRADES: 9-12 K.HOLLAND AUSTRALOPITHECUS AFRICANUS.
Evolution of Mankind By : Mathew Walker.
Human evolution Waikato university site
HOMINID EVOLUTION Phylogenetic tree to show the place of the family Hominidae in the animal kingdom.
Early hominid origins and evolution: the roots of humanity
Hominid Species. Australopithecus afarensis – A (4) Estimated age: 3.2 million years Date of discovery: 1974 Location: Hadar, Ethiopia Lucy was 3 feet.
BIOLOGY NOTES-HUMAN EVOLUTION. Primates HUMANS BELONG TO THE GROUP CALLED _____________that also include monkeys and apes HUMANS BELONG TO THE GROUP CALLED.
Human Evolution.
Hominid Evolution: On The Origin of Humans.
Human Biological Evolution
Evolution of the Hominins © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved 1  The Origin and Evolution of the Primates  There are large gaps.
1 McGraw-Hill © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. O v e r v i e w Early Hominids This chapter introduces students to the development of the hominid.
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.
Humans in the Natural World
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.
Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Exploring Biological Anthropology: The Essentials, 3 rd Edition CRAIG STANFORD JOHN S. ALLEN.
Arriving Late, Traveling Far: The Evolution of Human Beings
Ardipithecus ramidus 4.4 mya (Another branch or root of all hominoids) New Genus = New Species Ardi.
Human Evolution.
C 16- Primate Evolution Pp Content 16-1 Primate Adaptation & Evolution 16-2 Human AncestryHuman Ancestry.
Chapter 21: The Evolution of Primates Features Unique to Man Bipedal – Curvature of spine, weight distribution – Pelvis – upright walking – Foramen magnum.
BIOLOGY CONCEPTS & CONNECTIONS Fourth Edition Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Neil A. Campbell Jane B. Reece Lawrence.
Hominid Evolution. Physical features that define humans as primates: grasping limbs with opposable thumb strong mobile arms/shoulders stereoscopic vision.
Antiquity of Humanity Basal Hominids Australopithecines and Paranthropus Early Homo Later Homo.
Early Man/Hominids.
Humans emerged on one very young twig on the vertebrate branch. Humans and chimps diverged from a common ancestor 5- 7 million years ago. Q: Are our ancestors.
Early Hominids January 31, Part I: Hominid Phylogeny Australopithecus –africanus –afarensis –robustus Homo –habilis –erectus –sapiens.
Hominins Living and fossil species belonging to the human lineage Fossils Links Waikato Uni Hunterian.
HumanEvolution. Human evolution  It is believed that human evolution split from chimpanzee about 8-6 million years ago.  The earliest fossil fragments.
Australopithecines And Early Homo. Australopithecines (Australopiths)  Clearly bipedal  Relatively small brains  Large teeth, especially molars  Faces.
Human Evolution 12.6 Laetoli Footprints Laetoli footprints clearly show that the creatures who made them were fully bipedal Big toe hardly diverges from.
Unit 4 Scientific Approaches Chapter 17 Evolutionary psychology.
Hominid Evolution Timeline Thayer Sundol million years ago Ardipithecus ramidus, Ardi Not yet a direct link to humans, but research is being.
Human Evolution Ch 17.6 “wolf book”. Human evolution is NOT controversial amongst most scientists BUT disagreements on: how many species. Interpretations.
Chapter 8 Hominid Origins.
Early Hominins Chapter 13.
Mid-Pliocene Hominids (4-3 mya)
Hominid Evolution in Context
The Earliest Human Ancestors
Will the Earliest Hominid Please Stand Up?
Presentation transcript:

Biological Anthropology The Early Hominids

Hominid Species Ardipithecus ramidus Homo habilis Homo erectus Australopithecus afarensis Australopithecus africanus Australopithecus boisei Australopithecus robustus Homo habilis Homo erectus Homo sapiens

Ardipithecus ramidus A revolutionary find Why “revolutionary”? Let’s see what we know before her…

Australopithecus afarensis 1973 – “Johanson’s knee” First suggestion of bipedalism

Figure 11.13 The knees of A. afarensis are more like the knees of modern humans than the knees of chimpanzees. Consider the lower end of the femur, where it forms one side of the knee joint. In chimpanzees, this joint forms a right angle with the long axis of the femur. In humans and australopithecines, the knee joint forms an oblique angle, causing the femur to slant inward toward the centerline of the body. This slant causes the knee to be carried closer to the body’s centerline, which increases the efficiency of bipedal walking.

Australopithecus afarensis 1974 – “Lucy” 47 out of 207 bones

Australopithecus afarensis 1975 – “First Family” Over 200 fragments from at least 13 individuals

Australopithecus afarensis 1978 – Laetoli footprints 3.6 my BP (K/Ar) Clear bipedalism Divergent big toe

Australopithecus afarensis Fully bipedal, but… Arms longer than legs Divergent big toe (?) 3.5 – 4.0 ft tall

Figure 11.08 Here, Lucy’s skeleton stands beside the skeleton of a modern human female. The parts of the skeleton that have been discovered are shaded. Lucy was shorter than modern females and had relatively long arms and a relatively small brain.

Figure 06.06

Australopithecus afarensis Cranial capacity: 375-425 cc

Australopithecus afarensis Rounded dental arcade (not parabolic) app. 33% have large canine with diastema Simian shelf present

Figure 11.10a The teeth and jaws of A. afarensis have several features that are intermediate between those of apes and modern humans. (a) The dental arcade is less U-shaped than in chimpanzees, but less parabolic than in modern humans.

Australopithecus afarensis Ca. 4-3 my BP Found only in East Africa No known culture

Australopithecus africanus First find made in 1924 by quarryman M. de Bruyn Cleaned and identified by Raymond Dart

Australopithecus africanus Dental evidence indicated a juvenile age “Taung child”

Australopithecus africanus Finds in Southern and Eastern Africa Dates between app. 3.0-2.0 my BP

A. africanus: bipedalism Full biped Pelvis smaller & upright Parallel toes Developed arch in foot

A. africanus: dentition No large canines No diastema Simian shelf V-shape jaw

A. africanus: cranial capacity 400 – 600 cc

Osteodontokeratic culture osteo = bone donto = teeth keratic = hair, horn Postulated by Raymond Dart as early culture of Australopithecus africanus May be the culture of all Australopithecus species

Australopithecus boisei Australopithecus robustus Two very different types of hominids

Where were they found? boisei East Africa (Olduvai!) robustus South Africa

What are their dates? boisei ca. 2.5 – 1.0 my BP robustus

Cranial capacity boisei mean ca. 510 cc robustus mean ca. 510 cc

Bipedalism Human-like bipedalism Smaller in stature

dentition Huge jaw Small incisors & canines Large premolars & molars Parabolic dental arcade Simian shelf

Chewing apparatus Sagittal crest No diastema

“Dietary Hypothesis” suggests two groups Gracile A. afarensis A. africanus Robust A. boisei A. robustus

Dietary Hypothesis Graciles Omnivorous diet Robusts High fiber diet

Figure 05.34a

“Ardi” Ardipithecus ramidus a 4.4 million year old relative?

Found in Eastern Africa First fossils discovered in 1992 Includes a partial skeleton And remains of at least 35 other individuals

An unexpected mix of traits…

Ardipithecus locomotion hands and arms indicate she could climb like a chimp, but walked on her palms (not knuckles) Chimp skeleton A. afarensis skeleton rigid feet are more like an Old World monkey’s than an apes Ardi legs and pelvis indicate that she could move on two legs like a biped

Ardipithecus cranial capacity 300 – 350 cc reconstruction based on CT scans of fossil fragments

Ardipithecus dentition Modern human Modern chimp Ardi’s canines are blunt – like a humans A move away from multi-male, multi-female mating patterns?

Ardipithecus dentition Modern human Modern chimp The wear patterns and isotope analysis of teeth suggest a varied vegetarian diet

Why is Ardi so “revolutionary”? Our earliest ancestor may not have looked like a modern chimp Ardi undermines the “savanna hypothesis”