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The Evolution of the Homoinids

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Four genres: Gibbons, Orangutans, Chimpanzees, and Gorillas. Social Behavior of Apes ... Gorillas live in troops of 8 to 24, twice as many females as males and many ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Evolution of the Homoinids


1
Chapter 50
  • The Evolution of the Homoinids
  • Peter Stemler
  • Period 2

2
Introduction
  • Mammals first appeared 200 million years ago in
    the Mesozoic era
  • Three principal mammal lineages the monotremes,
    the marsupials, and the placentals
  • Humans are placentral mammals, as are tarsiers,
    lemurs, monkeys, and apes

3
Trends in Primate Evolution
  • Most trends in primate evolution seem to be
    related to various adaptations to tree life

4
The Primate Hand and Arm
  • First four-legged mammals all had five separate
    fingers and toes on each hand and foot
  • Other mammals through selective pressures
    (running, digging, swimming) developed hooves,
    paws, and flippers instead of five fingered hands
  • Most primates have nails as oppose to claws.
    Nails allow for manipulation and exploration by
    fingers and toes

5
The Primate Hand and Arm
  • Primates developed opposable thumb and
    flexibility in the arms
  • Radius and ulna could rotate allowing hand to
    move in a semicircle
  • Example South American monkeys can rotate the
    arm extensively in the socket for movement in the
    trees

6
Visual Acuity
  • Primates home in the trees selectively pressured
    them to develop eyes frontally as oppose to
    laterally
  • Almost all primates retinas have cones as well as
    rods
  • Cones color vision with fine visual
    discrimination
  • Foveas area of closely packed cones that produce
    sharp visual images in retina

7
Care of the Young
  • As a result of mammals nursing their young,
    primates tend to have longer, stronger
    mother-child relationships than other vertebrates
  • Larger primates the young matures slowly so the
    relationships more prevalent

8
Uprightness
  • Orientation of the head, which allows the primate
    to look straight ahead while vertical, another
    adaptation of primates

9
Prosimians
  • Two Major groups of Primates
  • Prosimians lorises, bush babies, tarsiers, and
    lemurs
  • Anthropoids Monkeys, apes, and humans
  • They are the ancestrial primates that Anthropoids
    branch off from.

http//www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/
BioBookHumEvol.html
10
Monkeys
  • Larger than modern prosimians, skulls more
    rounded, more intelligent, and full frontal
    vision and color discrimination
  • Monkeys arose from prosimian during Eocene epoch,
    38 million years ago

11
Monkeys
  • Two types of monkeys
  • New World monkeys, platyrrhines (flat-nosed)
  • Live in South and Central America, strictly live
    in trees
  • Old World monkeys, catarrhines (downward-nosed)
  • Live in Africa, mostly terrestrial but some
    tree-dwelers

12
Apes
  • Hominids is the group of apes and humans, grouped
    with Old World monkeys
  • 10 different species of apes
  • Larger than monkeys, so brain larger
  • Have a partially erect stance at all times
    because their arms are longer than their legs
  • Four genres Gibbons, Orangutans, Chimpanzees,
    and Gorillas

13
Social Behavior of Apes
  • Gibbons only monogamous hominids
  • Form pairs, each couple lives by themselves with
    its young offspring

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14
Social Behavior of Apes
  • Orangutan males usually mate with more that one
    female

http//www.webshots.com/g/25/36896-sh/41694.html
15
Social Behavior of Apes
  • Gorillas live in troops of 8 to 24, twice as many
    females as males and many infants and juvenilles
  • Large, male leader
  • Females only reproduce with the highest ranking
    yet unrelated male gorilla

16
Social Behavior of Apes
  • Chimpanzees thought to be closest to humans
  • As a result that are used for testing by
    scientest
  • Have similar patterns to humans

http//www.webshots.com/g/25/36896-sh/41694.html
17
The Emergence of the Hominids
  • Reymond Dart first discovered skull of a closely
    related human child in 1924 in Taung, South
    Africa
  • Raymond Dart named the species fossil
    Australopithecus (southern ape) under the hominid
    group

18
Current Status of the Australopithecines
  • Australopithecines Lived 3.6 million years ago,
    predecessor to homo habilis
  • Four species A. afarensis, A. africanus, A.
    robustus, A. boisei
  • Greatest find of the early hominids was Lucy
  • Adult female that was pieced together by fossils
    found in Ethiopia

19
Homo habilis
  • Derived from Australopithecus
  • Louis Leakey in 1962 at Olduvai, Africa
    discovered hominid fossils, named new species H.
    Habilis
  • Many different theories about where H. Habilis is
    on the evolution table, but for most part it
    comes after A. africanus

20
http//www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/
BioBookHumEvol.html
21
New Concepts in Hominid Evolution
  • Previously thought human evolution occurred in
    constant lineage, however replaced with evolution
    over various species whereas some led to
    extinction

22
New Concepts in Hominid Evolution
  • Also thought that bipedalism (ability to walk on
    two feet) set humans apart as oppose to superior
    intelligence
  • Gives rise to question What selective pressures
    gave rise to bipedalism?
  • One Theory, human can kill something easier with
    his hands
  • Owen Lovejoy Second Theory, human can bring
    more food greater distances to his family

23
Homo erectus
  • Kamoa Kimeu in Kenya found first fossils of Homo
    erectus, 1.6 million years old
  • Very similar to modern humans, except in the
    skull
  • These were the humans who inhibited caves, used
    hand axes, and discovered fire

24
Homo sapiens
  • This group of humans has a similar body skeleton,
    but most importantly is similar brain size
  • Three subspecies of H. sapiens
  • archaic Homo sapiens 400,000 to 200,000 years
    ago. Found in Europe, some in Asia and Africa too
  • Homo sapiens neanderthalensis 150,000 to 35,000
    years ago. Found in Europe and parts of Asia.
    Used sophisticated stone tools, buried their dead
  • Homo sapiens sapiens 30,000 years ago to
    present. Early Europeans called Cro-Magnon,
    created cave art.

25
Origin of Modern Humans
  • Evolved in Africa over a period of at least 3
    million years
  • Two theories
  • Candelabra hypothesis, humans had common ancestor
    until 1 million years ago, then split off and
    each coexisted
  • Noahs Ark model, humans evolved from an ancestor
    less that 500,000 years ago and that certain
    species became extinct
  • Molecular science supports Noahs Ark Model,
    organelle scrutinized is the Mitochondria
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