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Human evolution Aditi Pai

Human evolution

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Human evolution. Aditi Pai. "Hominid" refers to members of the human family, Hominidae, which consist of all species from the point where the human line splits from apes towards present day humans. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Human evolution

Human evolutionAditi Pai

Page 2: Human evolution

"Hominid" refers to members of the human family, Hominidae, which consist of all species from the point where the human line splits from apes towards present day humans.

Habitual bipedal locomotion (movement on two legs), an upright position, and a large brain that has lead to: tool use, language, and culture characterize hominids.

Page 3: Human evolution

Human evolution

A. History

B. Important stages in human evolution

C. Theories of human evolution

D. ‘Human Characteristics’

E. Are we still evolving?

Page 4: Human evolution

History

• 1856-Neander Valley– Discovery of a skull that was not quite human

Page 5: Human evolution

• 1859 – Darwin publishes ‘The Origin of Species’

• 1871- Darwin predicts that ancestors of humans would be found in Africa

Page 6: Human evolution

• Up till 1930s– Humanity evolved

in Europe

• 1950s--1960s– Many significant

fossils discovered

ABC D

ABCD

Bush model

Linear model

Page 7: Human evolution

• 1970s – present– more fossils – molecular

techniques– ‘tree model’ of

human evolution

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Current Controversy

6-7 m y old fossil

Earliest bipedal hominid?

Sahelanthropus tchadensis

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Important stages in human evolution

1. 3.2 million years ago2. 3 million years ago3. 2 million years ago4. 1 million years ago5. 200, 000 years ago6. 150, 000 years ago

Page 11: Human evolution

"Hominid" refers to members of the human family, Hominidae, which consist of all species from the point where the human line splits from apes towards present day humans.

Habitual bipedal locomotion (movement on two legs), an upright position, and a large brain that has lead to: tool use, language, and culture characterize hominids.

Page 12: Human evolution
Page 13: Human evolution

3.2 mya: The southern ape of afar

• Fossil: – “Lucy” (discovered

1974, Ethiopia)– Australopithecus

afarensis

Male

Page 14: Human evolution

Fossil of “Lucy”

Female

Page 15: Human evolution

Australopithecus afarensis

• Habitat: savannah and woodland

• Food: leaves, fruit, seeds, nuts, termites and eggs, grasses (?)

• Physical characteristics: – low forehead, flat nose, no chin– small brain– long dangly arms, short legs– facultative bipedal (upright on ground but could

dangle from branches)– sexually dimorphic

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Page 17: Human evolution

Paranthropus boisei Homo habilis

Page 18: Human evolution

3 mya: Paranthropus boisei

• Habitat: open terrain

• Food: nuts, roots and tubers

• Physical characteristics: – enormous jaw with chewing muscles, – large back teeth, small front teeth– specialized as vegetarians

• Not direct human ancestors

Page 19: Human evolution

3 mya: Homo habilis-the ‘handy man’

• Habitat: open terrain• Food: Scavenged for meat• Physical characteristics:

– small jaw and teeth – shorter arms– increase in brain size (because of carnivorous

diet and mode of feeding)– capable of speech

Page 20: Human evolution

Oldowan Tools

Made tools

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Page 22: Human evolution

Human migration

• 1.9 mya humans began to leave Africa to other continents

Page 23: Human evolution

Homo ergaster

                 

          

Page 24: Human evolution

2 mya: Homo ergaster• Habitat: dry -hot habitat

• Food: scavenger for meat

• Physical characteristics: – Tall with long limbs– Smooth and dark skin

• Temperature regulation through sweating– Narrow pelvis (lead to narrow birth canal)

• Mothers needed support of partner and group to raise babies

Page 26: Human evolution

Homo erectus

Page 27: Human evolution

• brain, almost human size • stocky, human-like body (larger than Homo habilis) • Java, China, and Africa • use of fire • increased but infrequent group hunting • language • crude shelters and some migration to colder areas • used tools

Homo erectus

Page 28: Human evolution
Page 29: Human evolution

Homo heidelbergensis

Page 30: Human evolution

1mya: Homo heidelbergensis

• Food: hunted for meat

• Physical characteristics: – Large brain – Tall

• Direct ancestors of Homo sapiens

Page 31: Human evolution

Boxgrove tools

H.heidelbergensis made Hand axes, wooden spears etc.

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200,000 ya: Homo neanderthalensis

male female

Page 34: Human evolution

200,000 ya: Neanderthal man

• Habitat: cold • Food: hunted for meat• Physical characteristics:

– Large face with massive ridges– No chin– Short stocky body (conserve heat)– Muscular

• Language• Social relationships important

Page 35: Human evolution

What happened to the Neanderthals?

• Extinct 28, 000 ya• Competition from Homo sapiens?

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Page 37: Human evolution

• 120, 000 ya • Physical characteristics:

– Eyebrow ridge small or absent– Prominent chin

• Tools --antler, bone, stone• Clothing, jewelry, artwork, musical

instruments

Homo sapiens

Page 38: Human evolution

Theories of human evolution

• Humans evolved in sub-Saharan Africa and spread from there

or• Humans evolved independently in

several places around the globe

Page 39: Human evolution

Out of Africa hypothesis

• Homo sapiens evolved in a single speciation event in Africa ~ 250, 000 ya

• Migrated to other regions, replaced Homo erectus

Page 40: Human evolution

Multi-regional hypothesis

• Local populations of Homo erectus evolved into Homo sapiens

• Mixed genes

• Retained local characteristics

Page 41: Human evolution

Support for multi-regional hypothesis

• No break in culture in S.E Asia

• Can explain the occurrence of regional characters

Page 42: Human evolution

Races• Original skin color- black

• Divergence from original black color to many different colors

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How different are the races?

• No genetic discontinuities between races

• Genetic differences between races only 10% of genetic diversity among humans

• No evidence for major biological differences

Page 44: Human evolution

Support for ‘out of Africa’ hypothesis

1. Level of diversity in maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA of humans from around the world highest among Africans

Page 45: Human evolution

2. Based on genetic diversity all non-Africans descended from a small band of humans that left Africa ~ 100, 000 ya

Support for ‘out of Africa’ hypothesis

Page 46: Human evolution

3. The Y-chromosome too shows no sign of any non-African DNA

Support for ‘out of Africa’ hypothesis

Page 47: Human evolution

• Australia --- ~60,000 ya• Europe --- ~70,000 ya• Near East --- ~90,000 ya• Africa --- ~130, 000 ya

Human migration

Page 48: Human evolution

Who were the first Americans?

• 13,000 ya• Crossed Bering Strait

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Human characteristics

• Bipedal gait • Big brain• Tool making• Social relationships• Art • Culture

Page 50: Human evolution

Bipedalism• When?

– Before Australopithecines• Advantages:

– Freed hands to carry objects – See predators better in grasslands– Access to foods not previously available– Carry children– Protection from sun in grasslands

Page 51: Human evolution

Evolution of bipedalism

1. Carrying objects2. See predators3. Aquatic environment (?)

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Evolution of big brain• Meat eating from Homo habilis onwards

– Did not require large intestines– Energy freed up for other organs including

brainor

• Cooked tuber eating in Homo erectus– Hunter-gatherers rely less on meat than

tubers– Reliance on scavenged meat is difficult.

Page 53: Human evolution

Tool making• Homo habilis onwards• Tool-making was considered a

‘human trait’– Discovery of tool-making in

chimpanzees– Tool making in Australopithecines?

Page 54: Human evolution

Homo sapiens survived extinction in late Pleistocene– ‘bottlenecks’ (drastic reduction in

population size )– cultural explosion– Societies became co-operative (‘troop-to-

tribe transition’)

Social relationships, art, and culture

Page 55: Human evolution

Are we still evolving?