Chapter 6 The First Humans © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved. Window on Humanity Conrad Phillip Kottak Third Edition
Chapter 6The First Humans
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved.
Window on HumanityConrad Phillip Kottak
Third Edition
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All right reserved.
Human Family Tree
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Overview
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Evolution of HomoEarly HomoH. erectusArchaic H. sapiensNeandertalsAnatomically modern humans (AMH)
Settling the Americas
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Early Homo
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Distinctive early Homo trends – exhibited by H. habilis and later H. erectus:Major increases in brain size and complexityIncreasingly elaborate tool makingGreater reliance on hunting (in addition to
gathering)
H. rudolfenis and H. habilis
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KNM-ER 1470 – skull found at Koobi Fora, KenyaLarge cranial capacity of the skull suggests it
belonged to Homo, but its molars are similar to those of hyperrobust australopithecines
Dating the skull is problematic – either 1.8 or 2.4 m.y.a.
KNM-ER 1813(H. Habilis)
What differences do you see in the skulls?
KNM-ER 1470(H. Rudolfensis)
Different theories about H. rudolfensis
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KNM-ER 1470 represents a species (H. rudolfensis) separate from H. habilis
Rudolfensis was earlier than, ancestral to habilisRudolfensis and habilis lived at the same time
(from about 2.4 to 1.7 m.y.a.)Rudolfensis and habilis were simply male and
female members of the same species (H. habilis)
Punctuated Equilibrium Model
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H. habilis was not very different from australopithecines in terms of body size and form (H. habilis was very simliar to Lucy)
Major and rapid change with the emergence of H. erectus (between 1.8 and 1.7-1.6 m.y.a.)Cranial capacity, body shape, and height of H.
erectus were comparable to those of modern humans
H. habilis to H. erectus transition may support a punctuated equilibrium model of the evolution of early hominins
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Punctuated Equilibrium Model is the idea that evolution involves short periods of rapid change interspersed with longer periods of relative stability
Emergence of H. erectus
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Major change in adaptive strategy – greater reliance on hunting
Rapid increase in the number and diversity of stone tools used for hunting and gatheringIncreasing reliance on cultural means of adaptation
Dietary changes eased the burden on the chewing apparatus – smaller dentition favored
Hunting of large prey encouraged the development of thicker skulls
Larger body size and cranial capacity (within range of modern humans)
Paleolithic tools
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Three divisions of the Paleolithic (Old Stone Age):Lower Paleolithic
roughly associated with H. erectusMiddle Paleolithic
roughly associated with archaic H. sapiens, including the Neandertals
Upper Paleolithic roughly associated with early members of H.
sapiens sapiens (anatomically modern humans)
Acheulian Tools
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Primary tool-making tradition of H. erectus during the Lower PaleolithicVarious tool types, including oval-shaped hand axesMore complex than earlier Oldowan pebble toolsAcheulian tradition illustrates trends in the evolution
of technology:Greater efficiencyManufacture of tools for specific tasks Increasingly complex technology
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Hand Axes
Scrapers
Blades
Adaptive strategies of H. erectus
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Interrelated biological and cultural changesImproved tools and “modern”
skeleton permitting long-distance walking and endurance – allowed H. erectus to increase its range and hunt more efficiently
Brain size was double that of australopithecines, within the low range of modern humans
Study of chewing muscles and molars indicate they were more dependent on hunting
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Lived in Rock Shelters and CavesUse of Fire
Hearths found at various sitesFire allowed H. erectus to colonize a wider range of
climates, provided protection against predators, made cooking possible – less strain on chewing
Evolution and expansion of H. erectus
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Important H. erectus sites:East and West Turkana, Kenya – 1.6 m.y.a.Dmanisi, former Soviet Republic of Georgia – 1.75 to
1.7 m.y.a.Indonesia (e.g., “Java man,” the first H. erectus find)
– at least 700,000 B.P. – perhaps 1.6 m.y.a.Zhoukoudian cave, China (e.g., “Peking man”) –
670,000 to 410,000 B.P.Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Eritrea, and South Africa
– 1 million to 500,000 B.P. at OlduvaiCeprano, Italy – 800,000 B.P.
Evolution and expansion of H. erectus
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Evolution and expansion of H. erectusWidespread distribution of H. erectus fossils
and stone tools – indicates expansion out of tropics into subtropical and temperate zones of Asia and Europe
Archaic H. sapiens
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300,000? to 28,000 B.P.Include the earliest members of our species
Neandertals (H. sapiens neanderthalensis) of Europe and the Middle East
Neandertal-like contemporaries in Africa and Asia (130,000 to 28,000 B.P.)
Brain size within the modern human range
Large jaw of Heidelberg man; transitional hominin, between H. Erectus and archaic H. Sapiens
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Lived during the second and third glacials (ice ages)a warmer interglacial period – last part of the Middle
PleistoceneDistribution of fossils and tools in Europe, Africa,
and Asia reflects increased tolerance of environmental diversity
Ice age conditions in the northern hemisphere during the Pleistocene (persistent glaciers with tundra and cold forests at lower elevations farther south)
Neandertals
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Discovered in Western and Central Europe and the Middle East
Archaic human fossils with Neandertal-like features found in Africa and Asia
Neandertal AdaptationIn Western Europe were biologically and culturally
adapted to an extremely cold climate (Würm glacial)Made clothes and elaborate tools (Mousterian tradition)Hunted reindeer, mammoths, and woolly rhinosAnatomy (e.g., stocky build, massive nasal cavities)
reflected adaptation to cold climateMassive faces and heavy wear on front teeth – evidence
that teeth used for various purposes (e.g., chewing animal hides to make winter clothing)
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Mousterian TraditionThe Mousterian Tradition was marked by
the progressive reduction in the use of large core tools, such as hand axes, as specialized flake tools became more common.
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Mousterian tradition unifacial hide scraper (left) and spear point (right)
(both were made from Levallois flakes)
Mousterian tradition hand ax
Oldowan tradition core tool
(chopper)
Neandertals
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Became less robust through timeImproving tool technology may have
assumed some of the burdens formerly placed on the anatomy
Neandertals and modern humans
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Debate over whether Neandertals were ancestral to modern Western Europeans
Current prevailing view: H. erectus split into two groupsOne group was ancestral to NeandertalsAnother group was ancestral to anatomically
modern humans (AMHs)AMHs evolved in Africa, Asia, Central Europe, or
the Middle East, then colonized Western Europe and displaced Neandertals around 50,000 B.P.
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Neandertals and modern humans
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Alternative view: Neandertals were ancestral to modern EuropeansEvidence: fossils from sites in Western and Central
Europe (e.g., Mladeč, l’Hortus, and Vindija) exhibit both Neandertal robustness and modern features
Fossils from Skhūl and Qafzeh in IsraelSuggest that archaic H. sapiens was evolving
directly into AMHs in the Middle East more than 50,000 years before Neandertals disappeared
Implication: Neandertals and AMHs overlapped in time, rather than being ancestor and descendant
Homo sapiens sapiens (AMHs)
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Most scholars believe AMHs evolved from an archaic H.
sapiens ancestor in Africa deny that Neandertals were ancestral to
AMHs in Western Europe and the Middle East
According to this view, AMHs spread out from AfricaIn Western Europe, they replaced or
interbred with the NeandertalsColonized America
“Out of Africa” hypothesis
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Study of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) lineagesEveryone alive today has mtDNA descended from a
woman (“Eve”) who lived in sub-Saharan Africa around 200,000 B.P.
Eve’s descendants left Africa no more than 135,000 B.P., displacing Neandertals in Western Europe and colonizing the rest of the world
Other evidence for African origin of AMHs:Three anatomically modern skulls dated to 154,000-
160,000 B.P. found in EthiopiaFossils and tools found at several South African sitesNeandertals coexisted with AMHs in the Middle East
for thousands of yearsChinese Skulls http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=Y9zVEQCIiRs
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Technological advances
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Upper Paleolithic tool-making traditionsAssociated with early AMHsEmphasized blade toolsMore efficient than Mousterian techniquesSome composite and bone tools
Adapt to more environments
Click for video on Lascaux Prehistoric Cave Paintings
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Glacial retreat
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Retreat of ice sheet in northern Europe (17,000-12,000 B.P.)
Tundra and steppe vegetation replaced by shrubs, forests
Reindeer and other large game replaced by more solitary animals
Southwestern Europe – economies became less specializedHumans began to exploit a wider range of plant and
animal lifeBroad-spectrum revolution
Settling the Americas
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Bering land bridge (Beringia) exposed during periods of glacial advance (15,000 years ago)
Gradual migration of big-game hunters from northeast Asia into North America
Southward migration via unglaciated corridors
Clovis points – used by Paleoindians to hunt large game in North America (12,000 to 11,000 B.P.)
Monte Verde site, ChileDated to 13,500 B.P.First migration of humans into the Americas may have occurred as early as 18,000 B.P.
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