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26.3 Human Evolution.

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Presentation on theme: "26.3 Human Evolution."— Presentation transcript:

1 Human Evolution

2 Classification Homo sapiens sapiens Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata
26.3 Homo sapiens sapiens Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primates Family Hominidae Genus Homo Species Sapiens Subspecies Sapiens

3 Classification Humans are primates
26.3 Classification Humans are primates Shared most recent ancestor with chimpanzees ~6 mya

4 What is a Primate? Mammals with:
26.3 Mammals with: Long fingers and toes with nails instead of claws Flexible joints and limbs Binocular vision Well-developed cerebrum Most adaptations for arboreal (tree-dwelling) life

5 Long Fingers and Toes Allows firm grip
26.3 Long Fingers and Toes Allows firm grip Claws became nails to allow advanced grips

6 Opposable Thumbs Thumbs that can move against the other digits,
26.3 Opposable Thumbs Thumbs that can move against the other digits, Allows power grip and precision grip Most primates have these

7 26.3 Flexible Joints Limbs can rotate in broad circles around a strong shoulder joint Strong clavicle (collar bone) Well suited for climbing

8 Binocular Vision Ability to combine visual images from both eyes
26.3 Binocular Vision Ability to combine visual images from both eyes Provides depth perception and a three-dimensional view of the world

9 Large Cerebrum “Thinking” part of the brain is large and intricate
26.3 Large Cerebrum “Thinking” part of the brain is large and intricate Enables Complex behaviors Critical thinking Reasoning Many primates create elaborate social systems

10 Human Evolution Humans are unique because of Bipedalism Large brains
26.3 Human Evolution Humans are unique because of Bipedalism Large brains Advanced tool use Language and advanced culture

11 Bipedalism Walking on two legs Many skeletal changes
26.3 Walking on two legs Many skeletal changes Pelvis, hips, knees, back, etc. Main advantage: tool use

12 26.3 Bipedalism

13 26.3 Brain Size Increased

14 Jaws and Teeth got Smaller
26.3 Jaws and Teeth got Smaller Shift away from plant material in diet

15 Ancient Hominines Australopithecus afarensis
26.3 Ancient Hominines Australopithecus afarensis “Lucy” is one of the most famous human ancestor skeletons Lived mya Bipedal apes but still very apelike Diet rich in fruit Good climber Spent significant time in trees

16 Ancient Hominines Homo habilis
26.3 Ancient Hominines Homo habilis Means “handy man” Significant tool crafting and use Speech possible

17 Ancient Hominines Homo erectus
26.3 Ancient Hominines Homo erectus 1.9 and 0.3 mya. Extremely successful and widespread Larger brain and flatter face than Homo habilis Much taller than previous hominids First hominid known to use fire

18 Ancient Hominines Homo erectus
26.3 Ancient Hominines Homo erectus

19 Ancient Hominines Homo neanderthalensis
26.3 Ancient Hominines Homo neanderthalensis 200,000 years ago Massive brow ridges with protruding nose, jaws, and teeth Heavily muscled Culturally advanced Manufactured variety of tools Still traces of Neanderthal DNA in humans today

20 Ancient Hominines Homo sapiens
26.3 Ancient Hominines Homo sapiens ~200,000 years ago Cro Magnon is name for early humans Advanced tools, communication, and culture Entered Europe ~100,000 years ago Interbred with Neanderthals Only hominine for past 24,000 years

21 26.3


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