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Early Homo

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H. erectus: Skull. Reconstruction of one of the H. erectus fossils from ... Larger skulls select for neotony, because of the constraints bipedalism puts on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Homo


1
Early Homo
2
Homo Begins
  • Contemporaneous (2 m.y.a.) sets of teeth, very
    different in size comprise the earliest evidence
    of a generic split the larger set is attributed
    to A. boisei, the smaller to H. habilis, the
    first species of the genus, Homo.
  • The distinctive early Homo trends are a rapid
    increase in brain size, increasingly elaborate
    tool-making, and an increasing emphasis on
    hunting, but there remains considerable debate as
    to when and in what population these trends led
    to speciation (from an australopithecine to Homo
    habilis).
  • Johanson and White propose that A. afarensis
    effectively produced two populations, one of
    which evolved into the other australopithecines,
    the other evolving into Homo habilis.
  • H. habilis was transitional and co-existed with
    A. boisei.

3
Homo habilis
4
Homo habilis
  • 612 cc brain
  • 2.3 - 1.6 mya
  • first toolmaker
  • prognathic face, brow ridge
  • probable meat-eater
  • possibly arboreal
  • discovered in 1960 by Leakeys
  • no speech

Artists representation of a Homo habilis band as
it might have existed two million years ago.
5
Homo rudolfensis
  • 781cc brain
  • 2.4 - 1.6 mya roughly contemporaneous with H.
    habilis
  • recent classification by Bernard Wood to
    differentiate from less specialized H. habilis
  • larger teeth than H. habilis, ate tougher foods
  • feet more like modern humans than like H. habilis

6
H. habilis vs. H. erectus
  • Finds in east Africa indicate the Homo habilis
    was not very different from the
    australopithecines in terms of body size and
    shape.
  • The earliest Homo erectus remains indicate rapid
    biological change.
  • The fossil record for the transition from H.
    habilis to H. erectus supports the punctuated
    equilibrium model of evolution.
  • H. erectus was considerably taller and had a
    larger brain than H. habilis.

7
Homo erectus
  • 1891 - Eugene Dubois discovers H. erectus in Java
  • Dubois calls it Pithecanthropus erectus
    initially, also dubbed Java Man
  • finds in China called Sinanthropus
  • dates from 1.9 mya to 27,000 years B.P.
  • 994 cc brain size (compare to 612 for H. habilis)
  • Acheulean tool industry

8
Homo erectus - Skulls
Rear views of three skulls of H. erectus and one
of Archaic Homo sapiens.
9
H. erectus Skull
Reconstruction of one of the H. erectus fossils
from Zhoukoudian, China.
10
Homo erectus
Photograph of Nariokotome boy, an early Homo
erectus found near Lake Turkana, Kenya.
11
Homo erectus Evolutionary Success
  • Less sexual dimorphism possible pair bonds,
    marriage
  • Less hair on body wearing of furs, other
    clothing
  • Wearing of furs ability to live further north
  • Quick adaptation to environment without physical
    changes
  • Culture is main reason H. erectus was so
    successful
  • organization for hunting
  • ability to protect against predators
  • control of fire?
  • possible campsites
  • tools (Acheulean industry)

12
H. erectus Culture/Biology Synergy
  • Acheulian tools and essentially modern bipedalism
    aided hunting.
  • H. erectus average brain size (1,000 cc) is
    double that of the australopithecines.
  • Larger skulls select for neotony, because of the
    constraints bipedalism puts on the size of the
    birth canal.
  • Neotony causes a long dependency period, which
    allows for the emphasis on cultural transmission
    of information.
  • Dependent children create an environment which
    increasingly selects for interdependent social
    groups.

13
H. erectus Distribution
The sites of discovery of Homo erectus and its
possible maximum distribution.
14
H. erectus Evolution and Expansion
  • Major H. erectus Sites
  • East, West Turkana, Kenya, dated 1.6 m.y.a.
    (Leakey)
  • Upper Bed II, Olduvai, dated 1 m.y.a.
  • Trinil, Java, Indonesia, dated approximately
    700,000 years ago (Dubois)
  • Zhoukoudian, China (a.k.a. Peking Man) is a
    massive site, dated 500,000-350,000 years ago
  • Europe has non-skeletal remains dating 700,000
    years ago, and skeletal remains dated at 500,000
  • The vast environmental differences encompassed by
    the H. erectus sites, and the associated lack of
    physical variation attest to the success of
    culture as an adaptive strategy.

15
Homo ergaster
  • Classification created in the 1980s based on
    anatomical differences in H. erectus specimens
  • cranial proportions
  • thin, arched brow ridge
  • eye sockets more rounded
  • face is more vertical
  • Andrew Kramers study showed that 16 H. erectus
    skulls are no more variable than a sample from
    modern H. sapiens and therefore not a separate
    species.

16
Tool-making
  • The oldest known manufactured tools are dated at
    2.6-2 m.y.a., were found in various parts of
    Africa, and are grouped under the name Oldowan
    pebble tools, given them by the Leakeys in 1931.
  • There is some speculation that relatively
    advanced tool-making by Homo ancestors might have
    created the environment which produced the
    generic Homo-Australopithecus split.
  • H. habilis may be as old as 2.4 m.y.a., which
    means it existed close to the time of the origin
    of stone tools.
  • Based on circumstantial evidence, it was likely
    that Australopithecines also made tools, if less
    well and of less permanent material than later
    Homo groups.
  • 1.6-1.8 m.y.a. saw a dramatic increase in the
    hunting efficacy of Homo and during this period
    P. boisei may have been forced into an
    exclusively vegetarian niche, providing an
    example of competitive exclusion.

17
Oldowan Tool Industry
  • found primarily with H. habilis (Latin for
    handyman) remains from over 2 mya
  • largest number of tools found at Olduvai Gorge,
    Tanzania, by Louis and Mary Leakey
  • choppers
  • unmodified flakes
  • earliest found at Omo and Hadar, Ethiopia (2.4
    mya) and in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

18
Tool-making
Evolution in tool making, from chopper (far left)
to flake (far right).
19
Acheulean Tool Industry
  • first appeared 1.5 mya, lasted over 1 million
    years
  • associated with H. erectus
  • more refined than Oldowan
  • bifaces, picks, cleavers used for butchering,
    digging, prehistoric Swiss Army knife
  • Acheulean didnt reach Asia?

Acheulean hand axes from Kenya
20
Paleolithic Tools
  • Three Paleolithic Divisions
  • Lower Paleolithic (Homo erectus) - Acheulean
  • Middle Paleolithic (archaic Homo sapiens) -
    Mousterian
  • Upper Paleolithic (up to 15,000 years ago) -
    Aurignacian, Chatelperronian, Solutrean,
    Magdalenian
  • Technique Differentiation
  • Paleolithic stone tool-making was marked by
    advancing refinement of technique, recognizable
    groupings of which are called tool-making
    traditions.
  • A basic distinction is between core and flake
    tools.

21
New Discoveries - Fire
  • fire drives (hunting)
  • H. erectus probably first controlled fire
  • date of mastery
  • 1.4 mya (proposed from Kenya)
  • 500,000 yBP (definite from Zhoukoudian)
  • fire uses
  • cooking
  • keeping predators away

22
New Discoveries - Campsite
  • Acheulean tools near water sources
  • Some camps found in caves
  • Possible built structures
  • Terra Amata, France (on Riviera)
  • 450,000 to 380,000 yBP
  • stake holes, line of stones
  • roughly 30 by 15 foot huts
  • central hearth

Reconstruction of hut at Terra Amata
23
H. erectus Food Procurement
  • H. erectus bipedalism, the de-emphasis on
    chewing (smaller molars) compared to
    australopithecines, and the emphasis on the front
    teeth (possibly for eating flesh) all suggest
    hunting and gathering as its primary adaptive
    strategy.
  • The skeletal evidence for hunting and gathering
    is supported by site remains, such as those found
    at Terra Amata (approximately 300,000 years ago).

24
H. erectus Language
  • No evidence clearly supporting H. erectus use of
    language exists.
  • Some researchers argue that Acheulian tools and
    apparent, complex hunting techniques, which do
    exist in the fossil record, support the
    possibility of rudimentary speech.
  • Nariokotome boy has small intercostal muscles
    (ribs), which may not have controlled fine motor
    movement for speech vertebral canal narrow
  • larynx was moving to human-like position
  • incipient basicranial flexion
  • H. erectus only capable of baby talk?

25
Ritual and Religion
  • red ochre - oxidized clay, often used for burials
    or as a status symbol
  • no evidence that H. erectus buried their dead
  • evidence of ritual cannibalism at Zhoukoudian?

26
Emergence of Modern Humans
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