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Hominid Evolution Chapter 19
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Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Hominid Evolution

Chapter 19

Page 2: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus)

Kingdom AnimalPhylum Chordate

Class MammalOrder Primates

Family HominidsGenus Homo

Species Sapiens

Humans and apes diverged ~8 Mya

Page 3: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Humans and Apes

• Diverged ~8 million years ago

• >12 different forms of hominids since then

Page 4: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Sahelanthropus tchadensis, – the oldest

known hominid – 7 million years

old– discovered in

2002 in Chad

Oldest Hominid

Page 5: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Skull found in the African nation of Chad in 2002– pushed back the origins of humans to nearly 7

million years ago– its discovery has raised more questions than it

answered

Sahelanthropus tchadensis

Page 6: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Paleoanthropologists now think – human evolution branched many times – rather than evolving in a somewhat straight line

• Key traits such as • upright walking• manual dexterity • “large” brain

– evolved more than once, and produced many evolutionary dead-ends

“Bushy” Model of Human Evolution

Page 7: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Fossil hominids

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v418/n6894/fig_tab/418133a_F2.html

Page 8: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Sahelanthropus tchadensis shows a mosaic of primitive and advanced features

• The small brain case and most of the teeth are chimplike

• Fairly flat nose and the prominent brow ridges – are features only seen, until now, in the human genus Homo

• Looks more human than hominids that came millions of years later!

Oldest Hominid

Page 9: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Much of our knowledge– comes from fossils found in a small desert area

southwest of Cairo, Egypt

• During the Late Eocene and Oligocene– this region was a lush, tropical rain forest – supported a diverse and abundant fauna and flora

Early History of Ancestral Hominids

Page 10: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Several thousand fossil specimens

– representing more than 20 species of primates

– recovered from rocks of this region

• One of the earliest ancestral hominids

– was Aegyptopithecus,

• small, fruit-eating, arboreal primate

• weighed about 5 kg

Thousands of Fossil Specimens

Page 11: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

One of the Earliest Ancestral Hominids

• Skull of Aegyptopithecus zeuxis,

– one of the earliest known anthropoids

– ~30 Ma

Page 12: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• The hominids (family Hominidae)– primate family that includes present-day humans – fossil record extending back 7 million years

• Hominids are bipedal– that is, they have an upright posture– Skeletal structure shows bipedal traits

• Hominid brain organization: larger compared to other primates

Hominids

Page 13: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Comparison between quadrupedal and bipedal locomotion– in gorillas and humans

Comparison of Locomotion

• In gorillas the ischium bone is long – and the entire pelvis is

tilted toward the horizontal

Page 14: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• In humans the ischium bone is much shorter

• and the pelvis is vertical

Comparison of Locomotion

• Comparison between quadrupedal and bipedal locomotion– in gorillas and humans

Page 15: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• In addition, hominids show a trend – toward a large and internally reorganized brain

• A large brain size and organization – is apparent in the brain of a present-day human

Hominids: Larger Reorganized Brain

Page 16: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Many anthropologists think – hominid features evolved in response to major

climatic changes

• During this time– vast savannas replaced the African tropical rain

forests – where the lower primates had been so abundant

Response to Climatic Changes

Page 17: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• As the savannas and grasslands continued to expand– hominids made the transition from true forest

dwelling – to life in an environment of mixed forests and

grasslands

Mixed Forests and Grasslands

Page 18: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Geologic Age Ranges

Page 19: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Discovered in Chad in 2002– nearly 7-million-year-old skull and dental remains

of Sahelanthropus tchadensis – make it the oldest known hominid yet unearthed

Oldest Known Hominid

Page 20: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Australopithecines are early hominids– genus Australopithecus

• Currently, five species are recognized: – A. anamensis– A. afarensis– A. africanus – A. robustus– A. boisei

Australopithecus

Page 21: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Many paleontologists accept that – A. anamensis

• the oldest known australopithecine,

– is ancestral to A. afarensis, • who in turn is ancestral to A. africanus

• and the genus Homo,

• as well as the side branch of australopithecines – represented by A. robustus and A. boisei

Evolutionary Scheme

Page 22: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• A reconstruction of Lucy’s skeleton

• Lucy is a ~ 3.5-million-year-old – Australopithecus afarensis

Lucy

• Knees worked like modern human knees

• Makes 40% bigger than females

• Males had large crests on the tops of their skulls

Page 23: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Preserved in volcanic ash in Tanzania– Discovered in 1978

– Proved hominids were bipedal walkers at least 3.5 million years ago

Hominid Footprints

Page 24: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Hominid Footprints

• Most scientists think the footprints – were made by

Australopithecus afarensis

– whose fossils are found nearby

Page 25: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• A. afarensis had a brain size of 380–450 cubic centimeters (cc), – larger than the 300–400 cc of a chimpanzee – much smaller than that of present-day humans

(1350 cc average)

Brain Size of A. afarensis

Page 26: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• The skull of A. afarensis retained many apelike features– massive brow ridges – forward-jutting jaw– teeth were intermediate between those of apes and

humans

• The heavily enameled molars – adaptation to chewing fruits, seeds, and roots

Apelike Features

Page 27: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Landscape with A. afarensis

• Re-creation of a Pliocene landscape – showing

members of

– Australo-pithecus afarensis

– gathering and eating

– various fruits and seeds

Page 28: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• A reconstruction of the skull – of Australopithecus

africanus

• This skull, – known as that of the

Taung Child, • was discovered by

Raymond Dart in South Africa in 1924

– and marks the beginning of modern paleoanthropology

Skull of A. africanus

Page 29: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• It appears the limbs – of A. africanus may not have been as well adapted

for bipedalism as those of A. afarensis

Not As Well Adapted for Bipedalism

Page 30: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Homo habilis • The earliest member of our own

genus Homo– lived 2.5-1.6 million years ago

• H. habilis evolved from the A. afarensis and A. africanus lineage – coexisted with A. africanus for about

200,000 years

The Human Lineage: handy man

Page 31: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• The geologic age ranges – for the commonly accepted species of hominids

Geologic Age Ranges

Page 32: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• H. habilis had a larger brain (700 cc average) – than its australopithecine ancestors but smaller

teeth

• It was about 1.2-1.3 m tall and weighed 32-37 kg

Characteristics of Homo habilis

Page 33: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• In contrast to the australopithecines and H. habilis, – which are unknown outside Africa, – Homo erectus was a widely distributed species– migrated from Africa during the Pleistocene

• Specimens have been found – not only in Africa – also in Europe, India, China ("Peking Man"), and

Indonesia ("Java Man")

Homo Erectus

Page 34: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• H. erectus evolved in Africa 1.8 million years ago – and by 1 million years ago – was present in southeastern and eastern Asia, – where it survived until about 100,000 years ago

Survived in Asia Until About 100,000 Years Ago

Page 35: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Although H. erectus developed regional variations in form, – the species differed from modern humans in several

ways

• Its brain size of 800-1300 cc, – though much larger than that of H. habilis, – was still less than the average for Homo sapiens

(1350 cc)

H. erectus Differed From Modern Humans

Page 36: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• H. erectus's skull was thick-walled– face was massive– prominent brow ridges – teeth were slightly larger than those of present-day

humans

• H. erectus was comparable to size to modern humans– between 1.6 and 1.8 m tall – weighing between 53 and 63 kg

Size Similar to Humans

Page 37: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• A reconstruction of the skull of Homo erectus– a widely

distributed species – whose remains

have been found in Africa, Europe, India, China, and Indonesia

Skull of Homo erectus

Page 38: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• The archaeological record indicates – that H. erectus was a tool maker

• Furthermore, some sites show evidence – that its members used fire and lived in caves– an advantage for those living in more northerly

climates

H. erectus Was a Tool Maker

Page 39: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Homo erectus Using Tools

• Re-creation of a Pleistocene setting in Europe – in which members of Homo erectus are

– using fire and stone tools

Page 40: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Currently, a heated debate surrounds the transition– from H. erectus to our own species Homo sapiens

• “Out of Africa" view– early modern humans evolved from a small African

colony– offspring then migrated from Africa and populated

Europe and Asia, driving the earlier hominid populations to extinction

The "Out of Africa" View

Page 41: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• “Multiregional" view– early modern humans did not have an isolated

origin in Africa– established separate populations throughout

Eurasia

• Occasional contact and interbreeding – enabled our species to maintain its overall

cohesiveness– still preserving the regional differences in people

we see today

The "Multiregional" View

Page 42: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Regardless of which theory turns out to be correct, – our species, H. sapiens, most certainly evolved

from H. erectus

Homo sapiens Evolved From H. erectus

Page 43: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Neanderthals– inhabited Europe and the Near East – 200,000 to 30,000 years ago

• Some paleoanthropologists :– as a Neanderthals are a subspecies of our own

species (Homo sapiens neanderthalensis)– Others: separate species (Homo neanderthalensis)

Neanderthals

Page 44: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Main difference between Neanderthals and present-day humans is in the skull– Neanderthal skulls were long and low – heavy brow ridges, a projecting mouth, and a weak,

receding chin

• Their brain was slightly larger on average – than our own, and somewhat differently shaped

Neanderthals Difference

Page 45: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Neanderthal Skull• Reconstructed

Neanderthal skull

• The Neanderthals

were characterized • by prominent heavy

brow ridges and weak chin

Page 46: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Given the specimens from more than 100 sites– we now know Neanderthals were not much

different from us, only more robust

• Europe's Neanderthals were the first humans – to move into truly cold climates– enduring miserably long winters and short

summers – as they pushed north into tundra ecosystems

First Humans in Cold Climates

Page 47: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Burial Ceremony in a Cave

• Archaeological evidence indicates – Neanderthals lived in caves – and participated in ritual burials– as depicted in this painting of a burial ceremony

– such as occurred approximately 60,000 years ago – at Shanidar Cave, Iraq

Page 48: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• About 30,000 years ago– humans closely resembling modern Europeans – moved into the region inhabited by the

Neanderthals and completely replaced them

• Cro-Magnons– successors of the Neanderthals in France– 35,000 to 10,000 years ago– huge advances in development of art and

technology

Cro-Magnons

Page 49: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Cro-Magnons were cave painters

• Using paints made from manganese and iron oxides– painted hundreds of scenes on the ceilings and

walls of caves in France and Spain– many of them are still preserved today

Cave Painters

Page 50: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Cro-Magnons were very skilled cave painters

– Painting of a horse – from the cave of Niaux, France

Painting From a Cave in France

Page 51: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• With the appearance of Cro-Magnons, – human evolution has become almost entirely

cultural rather than biological

• Humans have spread throughout the world – by devising means to deal with a broad range of

environmental conditions

Cultural Evolution

Page 52: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Summary

• Aegyptopithecus 32 Ma (ancestral hominid – primate)– Somewhat developed forehead

• Australopithecus 5 Ma (early hominids)– Afarensis (Lucy) 4 Ma, bipedalism, still tree climbers, small skull– Africanus 2-3 Ma slightly larger brain

• Homo habilis 2 Ma– Larger brain, less pronounced brow, rounder head, smaller face– Use of stone tools

• Homo erectus 500 K-2Ma– Larger brain and body– Longer skull, large brow ridges

• Homo sapiens neanderthalensis 200 K– Large brains and bodies, lack of frontal lobes?

• Homo sapiens sapiens (cro-magnon) 90 K– Anatomically similar to humans

Page 53: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Climate in Human History

• Peak of glaciation 18 Ka

• Present interglacial began 10 Ka

• Climatic Optimum

– 6-7 Ka

– First great civilizations in Middle East

– Some collapsed 3 Ka when climate changed

• Subatlantic Deterioration

– 2.5 Ka

– Reflected in art and invasions

Page 54: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

• Drought and famine

• Location of settlements

• Exploration

• Medieval Warm Period began ~950 A.D.

• Little Ice Age 1550-1850 A.D.

Climate in Human History

Page 55: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Vikings

• Settled Greenland and Iceland during Medieval Warm Period

• During Little Ice Age, Greenland was abandoned and Iceland struggling

• Ice blocked trade routes, cold weather caused poor harvests

• Fish moved southward

Page 56: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Climate reflected in art

• Little Ice Age at its peak during 2nd epoch

www2.sunysuffolk.edu/mandias/lia/little_ice_age.html

Page 57: Hominid Evolution Chapter 19. Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus) Kingdom Animal Phylum Chordate Class Mammal Order Primates Family Hominids Genus Homo.

Recent History

• Two centuries of warm, mild climate

• Continual drying of northern Africa

• Interglacial should be coming to an end – will humans prolong it?