Top Banner
Primate Evolution
24

Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Harvey Dawson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Primate Evolution

Page 2: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Today’s Objectives:

investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including:– Examining fossil records – Recognizing how adaptations lead to

natural selection

Page 3: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.
Page 4: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Primates are mammals that have:

Opposable thumbs Large brain Good, stereoscopic vision Ability to brachiate Flexible elbows for hand rotation Grasping feet

Page 5: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Early Primates

Appeared 60-65 million years ago Prosimian

– Small bodies– Lemurs, Tarsiers

Anthropoids– Human-like primates– Evolved in Africa

Page 6: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.
Page 7: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

 Small Insectivore from the end of the Mesozoic Era

Page 8: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Proto-primates

Page 9: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Early Prosimians

  

Smilodectes   (lemur-like family Adapidae   

from the Eocene Epoch)  

Page 10: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.
Page 11: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Early Monkeys and Apes

Page 12: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

  Great Rift Valley system   

(shown in green)  

Page 13: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

 India Forcing up the Himalayas

 and the Tibetan Plateau

Page 14: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.
Page 15: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Hominid Evolution

Hominids developed

5-8 million yrs ago Hominids are bipedal First hominids were in

genus Australopithecus– “Lucy” most famous fossil hominid

More modern hominids were in genus Homo

Page 16: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

More recent humans

Homo sapiens (developed 400,000 years ago)

– Neanderthals• Europe arrival (100,000 years ago)

– Cro-Magnon • Europe arrival (40,000 years ago)• Americas arrival (12,000 years ago)

Page 17: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

 A schematic showing the spreading of humans in history

Page 18: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

The Spreading of early modern man (red) from Africa, based on genetic studies. 

Page 19: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Up to 37 500 YBP

Page 20: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Up to 35 000 YBP

Page 21: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Up to 32 500 YBP

Page 22: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

Up to 30 000 YBP

Page 23: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

To put Human History into prospective

Page 24: Primate Evolution. Today’s Objectives: investigate and understand how primates have changed through time, including: –Examining fossil records –Recognizing.

4.6 billion The Earth forms and is bombarded by meteorites and comets.3.8 billion Years agoReplicating molecules (the precursors of DNA) form.

3.5 billion Years agoUnicellular life evolves. Photosynthetic bacteria begin to release oxygen into the atmosphere.

555 million Years agoMulti-cellular marine organisms are common. The diverse assortment of life includes bizarre-looking animals like Wiwaxia.

500 million Years agoFish-like vertebrates evolve. Invertebrates, such as trilobites, crinoids, brachiopids, and cephalopods, are common in the oceans.

450 million Years agoArthropods move onto the land. Their descendants evolve into scorpions, spiders, mites, and millipedes.

420 million Years agoLand plants evolve, drastically changing Earth's landscape and creating new habitats.

360 million Years agoFour-limbed vertebrates move onto the land as seed plants and large forests appear. The Earth's oceans support vast reef systems.

250 million Years agoThe supercontinent called Pangea forms. Conifer-like forests, reptiles, and synapsids (the ancestors of mammals) are common.

248 million Years agoOver 90% of marine life and 70% of terrestrial life go extinct during the Earth's largest mass extinction. Ammonites are among the survivors.

225 million Years agoDinosaurs and mammals evolve. Pangea has begun to break apart.

130 million Years agoAs the continents drift toward their present positions, the earliest flowers evolve, and dinosaurs dominate the landscape. In the sea, bony fish diversify.

65 million Years agoA massive asteroid hits the Yucatan Peninsula, and ammonites and non-avian dinosaurs go extinct. Birds and mammals are among the survivors.

4 million Years agoIn Africa, an early hominid, affectionately named "Lucy" by scientists, lives. The ice ages begin, and many large mammals go extinct.

130,000 Years agoAnatomically modern humans evolve. Seventy thousand years later, their descendents create cave paintings — early expressions of consciousness.