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Chapters 5 and 6

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Title: Chapters 5 and 6


1
Chapters 5 and 6
  • Primate and Hominoid Evolution

2
Chapter Outline
  • Macroeveolution and the process of Speciation
  • Mammalian Primate Evolution
  • Beginning of Bipedalism

3
Macroevolution and the Process Of Speciation
  • Macroevolution focuses upon the formation of new
    species (speciation) and on the evolutionary
    relationships between groups of species.
  • A species is usually defined as a population or
    group of populations capable of interbreeding and
    producing fertile offspring.

4
Speciation
  • Speciation is inferred in the fossil record when
    a group of organisms takes on a different
    appearance over time.
  • Over time, as the two populations come to differ
    from each other, speciation occurs in a branching
    fashion known as cladogenesis.
  • In anagenesis a single population accumulates new
    mutations over time until it is considered a
    separate species.

5
Punctuated Equilibria
  • A model of macroevolutionary change that suggests
    evolution occurs via long periods of stability or
    stasis punctuated by periods of rapid change.

6
Evolutionary Relationships
  • Derived and ancestral
  • Derived features are characteristics that define
    a group of organisms that did not exist in
    ancestral populations (bipedalism)
  • Ancestral features are characteristics possessed
    by an organism or group of organisms due to
    shared ancestry (bilateral symmetry)
  • Convergent evolution means that two species came
    up with the same idea (wings on butterflies and
    birds) but they do not share evolutionary history

7
Nondirectedness of Macroevolution
  • Evolution is not directed. Macroevolution
    evolution happens because circumstanc allows it.
  • If a meteor hadnt hit the earth and the climate
    hadnt changed drastically (cooling), dinosaurs
    wouldnt have become extinct and allow mammals to
    flourish. Mammals just happened to have the
    traits (warm bodies, etc) that enabled them to
    live through climate change. It was not
    preordained by nature. If a massive, abrupt
    climate change hadnt occurred, dinosaurs (not
    humans) might very well still walk the earth.

8
Mammalian Primate Evolution
  • Climate changes led to the appearance of primates
    about 65 million years ago (Paleocene Epoch).
  • These were small, arboreal, nocturnal, insect
    eaters.
  • About 23 million years ago, hominoids, the
    primates that include all living and extinct apes
    and humans began to appear in Asia, Africa, and
    Europe.
  • Genetic studies have confirmed that the African
    apes are our closest living relatives.
  • Bipedalism preceded brain expansion, and played a
    pivotal role in setting us apart from the apes.

9
Theories about Primate Evolution
  • Climate change led to life in trees, which was
    responsible for visual acuity and manual
    dexterity (those who couldnt grasp branches or
    judge distances died)
  • The visual predation theory indicates that
    predators of the small tree-dwelling primates
    could not reach them in their trees

10
True Primate Bodies, Advance of Anthropoids
  • Start 55 million years ago in the Eocene Epoch
  • Enlarged braincases, slightly reduced snouts,
    forward position of eye orbits, postorbital bar
  • Earliest anthropoid primates appeared 45 mil.
    Years ago
  • By 23-34 million years ago, anthropoids
    diversified and expanded (from fossil found in
    Egypt)

Aegyptopithecus
11
Continental Drift
  • According to the theory of plate tectonics, the
    movement of continents embedded in underlying
    plates on the earths surface in relation to one
    another over the history of life on earth.
  • This enabled the early primates to spread to all
    the continents before they split adaptive
    radiation

Untold tragedies of continental drift
12
Continental Drift
13
  • Mammals were preadapted (possessed the biological
    equipment to take advantage of new opportunities
    after the extinction of the dinosaurs).
  • Being homeotherm instead of isotherm was useful.
  • Adaptive radiation refers to rapid
    diversification of an evolving population as it
    adapts to a variety of available niches.
  • This did not happen until mammals were present on
    the earth for 100 million years.

14
Golden Age of Hominoids (Miocene)
  • Old World anthropoid dental pattern (2-1-2-3) and
    Y5 molars
  • No tail
  • Broad, flexible shoulder joints
  • From the Miocene Epoch (5 to 23 million years
    ago)
  • Are Miocene apes the missing link between humans
    and other African apes? Hard to say b/c only
    skulls have been found and bipedalism is a
    pre-req for being a hominid

15
Molecular Clock
  • The hypothesis that dates of divergences among
    related species can be calculated through an
    examination of the genetic mutations that have
    accrued since divergence.

16
Human Evolution
  • Humans and their ancestors are distinct among
    hominoids for bipedalism, a form of locomotion on
    two feet.
  • In the past 30 years studies have confirmed that
    the African apes (chimpanzees, bonobos, and
    gorillas) are our closest living relatives.
  • Between 8 and 5 million years ago, humans,
    chimpanzees, and gorillas began to follow
    separate evolutionary courses

17
Bipedalism
  • Inclusion of any fossil specimen in the human
    evolutionary line depends upon evidence of
    bipedalism it is a derived characteristic
  • IT CAME FIRST!!!
  • Bipedalism predates the larger brains known for
    humans (Piltdown man fraud)

18
Changes in Anatomy Associated with Bipedalism
  • Skull centered above spinal column through
    foramen magnum
  • Spinal column convex and concave curves that
    maintain upright posture, center of gravity above
    the legs not in front of them
  • A chimps spine has a single arching curve,
    humans curve with the various vertebra
  • Pelvis chimps are elongated, humans are wider
    and shorter lower limbs curve inward to maintain
    gravity
  • Feet arched, no opposable toe

19
Australopithecines
  • The genus including several species of early
    bipeds from southern and eastern Africa living
    between about 4.3 and 1.1 million years ago, one
    of whom was directly ancestral to humans.

20
Australopithecus afarensis
  • Lucy and Lucys baby (3.3 mil. Yr. old)
  • Looked like an ape from the waist up and a human
    from the waist down
  • Lucys forearm is shorter than an apes, but
    larger than a humans
  • Fully bipedal, but fingers and toes indicate she
    was adapted to climbing trees
  • Large jaws, brow ridge, chinless, small brain,
    backward sloping skull
  • Canines smaller than a humans, larger than a
    chimps, maintains diastema

chimp
human
Australo.
21
Robust Australopithecines
  • Several species within the genus
    Australopithecus,who lived from 2.5 and 1.1
    million years ago in eastern and southern Africa.
  • Known for the rugged nature of their chewing
    apparatus (large back teeth, large chewing
    muscles, and bony ridge on their skull tops for
    the insertion of these large muscles).
  • They died out were not the predecessor of humans

22
Gracile Australopithecines
  • Members of the genus Australopithecus possessing
    a more lightly built chewing apparatus.
  • Likely had a diet that included more meat than
    that of the robust australopithecines.
  • Their less robust jaws and skull enabled them to
    eat different foodsthey were more naturally
    adaptive

23
Bipedalism was Risky Business
  • Bipedalism must have been useful for our
    ancestors who had to make it in the forest AND in
    the savannah
  • Bipeds are slower than quadrapeds,
  • Their underbelly shows
  • They were an easy meal for a carnivore
  • They could have done it to carry food, to avoid
    heat stress
  • Bipeds might have just developed through
    macromutation and then it stuck around b/c it
    ended up being useful b/c bipeds can walk long
    distances

24
Chapters 7 and 8
  • Early Homo and the Origins of Culture and
  • Pre-modern Humans and the Elaboration of Culture

25
Chapter Outline
  • Who is Homo?
  • Differences between Homo and Australopithecenes.
  • Tools and Culture
  • Elaboration of Culture
  • Neandertal

26
Homo habilis
  • Handy man.
  • The first fossil members of the genus Homo
    appearing 2.5 million years ago, with larger
    brains and smaller faces (less robust chewing
    apparatus) than australopithecines.

Discovered by the Leakey Family in the Olduvai
Gorge in association with tools
27
Lumpers or Splitters
  • Scientists frequently argue about where in the
    fossil record any particular fossil belongs
  • Lumpers put all fossils that look alike into the
    same category, figuring that its impossible to
    say whether the ancient remains are a separate
    species or not
  • Splitters focus on the variation of the fossil
    record and interpret minor differences in skull
    or skeleton as indicative of a separate species
  • Is it a species difference or simple sexual
    dimorphism?

A. afarensis. Leftmale, rightfemale
28
Differences b/t early Homo and Australopithecus
  • 2.4 mil. Yrs ago, Homo went in a different
    direction from Australopithecus
  • Homo enlarged brain size, ability to cool the
    brain (major heat generator), smaller teeth,
    human-like brain shape, evidence for stone tool
    making, meat eating
  • Robust aust. Co-existed with Homo
  • They had huge jaws and back teeth for processing
    plant food, brain size didnt change, no evidence
    of stone tool use, specialized in eating plant
    food (no meat)

29
Lower Paleolithic Tools
  • Early stone tools (2.6 mil. To 200,000 years ago)
  • Made with the percussion method (using a
    hammerstone to remove flakes, make a blade)
  • People who made these were thinking they knew
    how a tool could be made, used the best raw
    materials, know about flaking, shows thinking and
    planning

30
Oldowan
  • The first stone tool industry.
  • Beginning between 2.6 and 2.5 million years ago.
  • Critical industry for making meat RELIABLY
    available
  • We, as our ancestors, cannot use our nails and
    teeth to rip through skin and fur we need tools
  • This provided a reliable and efficient food supply

31
Hunting or Scavenging?
  • Homo was a scavenger
  • Cut marks from tools are made on top of chewing
    marks from animals
  • In fact, Homo was probably the third animal to
    get at a kill (tertiary scavenger)
  • Homo would drag parts of the animal to a
    tool-making site for butchering
  • They ate marrow, which provides lots of fat and
    proteinmore so than lean muscle meat

32
Homo erectus
  • Upright man. also, the traveler
  • A species within the genus Homo first appearing
    just after 2 million years ago in Africa and
    spreading through the Old World.
  • Had a brain close in size to that of modern
    humans.
  • Had sophisticated behaviors including use of fire
    for warmth, cooking, and protection.

33
H. Erectus traveled
Green indicates where H. erectus went
  • Homo erectus is found in Africa, Asia, and Europe
  • Homo erectus walked out of Africa onto other
    continents
  • Once out, did Homo erectus stay a discrete
    species or did he become different species?
  • The lumpers say no, the splitters say yes

34
Physical Characteristics of H. erectus
  • Bigger brain (1,000 cc)
  • Low vault of cranium, head long and narrow
  • Shape of brain very modern-like (especially in
    speech area)
  • Brain asymmetrical
  • Massive brow ridge
  • Sloping forehead, receding chin
  • Smaller teeth, but powerful compared to modern
    standards
  • More muscular than modern humans and greater
    height
  • Less sexual dimorphism

H. habilis
H. erectus
35
Relationship b/t H. habilis and H. erectus
  • H. erectus derived traits
  • Increased body size, reduced sexual dimorphism,
    human body form
  • H. erectus ancestral traits
  • Long neck, low angle of thigh bone, long low
    vault of brain, constriction of skull behind the
    eyes, smaller (than human) brain size

36
Culture of Homo erectus
  • Acheulean tools standardized, shaper points,
    regular cutting edges, diversified tool kit
    (cleavers, picks, knives, axe)
  • Fire able to stay warm in cold conditions
    (outside of Africa), helps thaw carcasses,
    predigest food, stay up after dark (socialize?)
  • Hunting able to organize a hunt, run animals off
    cliffs, etc.
  • Possible sea-faring craft (Indo)
  • Rock carvings (India)
  • Symbolic art indicates language was
    hypothetically possible

37
Homo sapiens
  • Between 400,000 and 200,000 years ago, evolving
    humans achieved the brain capacity of
    contemporary Homo sapiens.
  • Several variations of the genus Homo existed
    around this time, including the Neandertals.

38
Levalloisian Tradition
  • The pace of culture accelerated with the
    appearance of Homo sapien
  • Levalloisian tradition involves preparing a core
    by removing small flakes from the stones surface
  • This produces a more efficient, sharper-edged
    blade
  • They fastened these blades to sticks
  • Sometimes painted them

39
Neandertal
  • A distinct group within the genus Homo inhabiting
    Europe and Southwest Asia from approximately
    125,000 to 30,000 years ago.
  • Represented as the classic cave men.
  • They had modern-sized brains with faces and
    skulls that were very different from later
    fossilized remains.
  • Extremely muscular, short limbs

40
Neandertal Culture
  • The use of fire was essential to their survival
    in cold climates.
  • They lived in small bands or family units, in
    the open and in caves.
  • They likely used language to communicate.
  • They buried their dead, reflecting ritual
    behavior.
  • Fossil remains of an amputee discovered in Iraq
    and an arthritic man excavated in France imply
    they cared for the disabled.

41
Mousterian
  • The tool industry of the Neandertals and their
    contemporaries of Europe, Southwest Asia, and
    northern Africa from 125,000 to 40,000 years ago.
  • Mousterian tools are lighter and smaller than
    those of earlier traditions.
  • Previous industries obtained only two or three
    flakes from an entire stone core, Mousterian
    toolmakers obtained many smaller flakes, which
    they retouched and sharpened.

42
H. sapiens
  • Evidence indicates that at least one population
    of archaic H. sapiens evolved into modern humans.
  • Whether this was due to the biological evolution
    of a new species or a simultaneous worldwide
    process involving all archaic forms is debated.

43
Recent African origins hypothesis
  • The hypothesis that all modern people are derived
    from a single population of archaic H. sapiens
    from Africa.
  • These H. sapiens replaced other archaic forms due
    to superior cultural capabilities.
  • Also called the Eve or out of Africa
    hypothesis.

44
The Multiregional Hypothesis
  • The hypothesis that modern humans originated
    through a process of simultaneous local
    transition from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens
    throughout the inhabited world.

45
Upper Paleolithic
  • The last part (40,000 to10,000 years ago) of the
    Old Stone Age, featuring tool industries
    characterized by long slim blades and an
    explosion of creative symbolic forms.
  • Technology called Aurignacian tradition

Cave painting of a bull and a horse in Lascaux
Grotto, near Montignac, France.
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