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Lecture 6 : The Palaeolithic Overview

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Title: Lecture 6 : The Palaeolithic Overview


1
Lecture 6 The PalaeolithicOverview
  • OBJECTIVES
  • LOWER PALAEOLITHIC
  • Early hominins
  • Archaic hominins
  • Pre-Modern Homo
  • MIDDLE PALAEOLITHIC
  • Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis)
  • Homo sapiens
  • UPPER PALAEOLITHIC
  • Dispersal

2
Objectives
  • There are two reasons for taking a historical
    approach
  • To explore how changes in the nature of society
    in the past created new risks from infectious
    diseases.
  • To demonstrate how infectious diseases have
    influenced the course of history.

3
Origins
  • The world is about 4.5 to 5 billion (i.e. 5,000
    million) years old.
  • The ancestors of humans (hominins) split from
    apes.
  • Our nearest relatives are chimpanzees, from whom
    we split about 5-8 million years ago.
  • We split from gorillas about 9-11 million years
    ago.
  • Further back we split from the other great apes
    (e.g. orangutans), lesser apes (e.g. gibbons) and
    other primates (e.g. monkeys, baboons).

4
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5
Chimpanzee
Gorilla
Gibbon
Orangutan
6
Hominin Evolution
  • Fossil evidence suggests there were many branches
    and evolutionary dead-ends.
  • Possible hominins have been found dating back to
    6-7 million years ago, but the oldest definite
    hominins (archaic hominins) date to about 4
    million years.
  • The first hominins classed as belonging to our
    genus (pre-modern Homo) date to about 2 millions
    years ago.
  • Modern humans (Homo sapiens) only evolved about
    200,000 years ago.

7
Early And Archaic Hominins
  • Our ape-like ancestors descended from trees in
    Africa about 5-9 million years ago.
  • Australopithecus (southern ape) is found in
    east and southern Africa from about 4 million
    years ago.
  • Australopithecus was confined to tropical and
    semi-tropical parts of Africa.
  • Australopithecus could stand upright and was
    bipedal. However, it could still climb trees. It
    may have used crude tools.
  • Australopithecus was succeeded by Paranthropus,
    which became extinct about 1 million years ago.

8
Early And Archaic Hominins
9
Pre-Modern Homo
  • Paranthropus overlapped with the first Homo.
  • Homo habilis evolved about 2.5 million years ago.
    Small in stature.
  • Homo erectus evolved about 1.9 million years ago.
    Similar in size to modern humans. First to be
    found outside Africa in the Middle East.
  • Homo erectus is found in tropical Asia about 1
    million years ago and in temperate parts of Asia
    and Europe by 500,000 years ago. Ate meat and may
    have become a hunter.

10
Homo habilis
Homo erectus
Homo ergaster
11
Pre-Modern Homo Sites
12
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13
Diseases
  • Three major implications for diseases
  • Descent from the trees exposure to new vectors
    and agents.
  • Omnivorous diet exposure to zoonoses.
  • Expansion into new regions new zoonoses, but
    fewer helminths.
  • Low population density and mobility provided
    protection against extinction.

14
Neanderthals
  • H. neanderthalensis predominated in Europe and
    Middle East 200,000 to 30,000 years ago when they
    became extinct.
  • Neanderthals were quite advanced. They had large
    brains, and adapted to colder climates.
  • They burried their dead and hunted in groups.
  • They appear to have looked after their injured
    and may have even developed medicine.

15
Neanderthal Man
16
Neanderthal Sites
17
Modern Homo Sapiens
  • Homo sapiens evolved around the same time in
    Africa.
  • Around 50,000 years ago they developed weapons
    which could be used to hunt large mammals.
  • They colonised the Near East by 90,000 BP and
    Western Europe by 40,000 BP (Cro-Magnon man).
  • Developed cave art (e.g. Lascaux, France).
  • Neanderthals disappeared shortly after emergence
    of Cro-Magnons.

18
Dispersal
  • Species of big game became extinct in Africa
    around 50,000 BP this may have prompted
    colonisation of Europe.
  • Australia was colonised 30,000-40,000 BP. Big
    game species disappeared around the same time.
  • Siberia was colonised about 20,000 BP.
  • North America and South America were colonised by
    12,000 BC via Bering Straits and Alaska. Big game
    species became extinct around 11,000 BC.

19
Sunda
Sahul
20
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21
Health And Disease
  • Palaeolithic hunter gatherer societies had a
    balanced diet and probably enjoyed good health.
  • Population densities were low. This prevented
    many diseases becoming endemic.
  • Population numbers were kept in check by food
    supplies.
  • Life expectancy was probably around 40.
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