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Rise of Genus Homo

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Transition from apelike Australopithecus to modern human proportions (Homo) ... Specifically developed for the butchery of large animals ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rise of Genus Homo


1
Rise of Genus Homo
  • Biological Anthropological
  • by Stanford, Allen, Anton
  • Professor Bender

2
Defining Genus Homo
  • Transition from apelike Australopithecus to
    modern human proportions (Homo) occurred in a
    short time period 2.3 1.7 MYA
  • By 1.5 MYA long lower limbs and large body size
    existed
  • Early Homo not that different from later A.
  • In general Homo differs from A. in
  • Larger, more rounded brain cases
  • Smaller, less projecting face
  • Smaller teeth
  • Eventually, larger body
  • More efficient striding bipedalism
  • Shift in foraging strategy?

3
Earliest Genus Homo
  • 1960s Louis and Mary Leakey discovered 2 MYA
    partial skeleton of juvenile skull at Olduvai
    Gorge
  • Larger brain than A.
  • Named Homo habilis skilled human or handy man
    referring to the use and manufacture of stone
    tools
  • 1.8 1.9 MYA
  • Greatly vary in size, maybe too much for a single
    species

4
Early tool use
  • Tool industry particular style of making stone
    tools
  • Tools used to remove meat and crack open
    bones
  • Butchering sites
  • Quarrying sites
  • Home base
  • Oldowan Industry2.5 MYA
  • Simple, unifacial core and flake tools
  • Core lumps of stone, often river cobbles
  • Flake fragment taken from core
  • Hammerstone used to strike flakes from core or
    get marrow from bone

5
Hunting and scavenging
  • Earliest hominids almost certainly ate most of
    the same foods that modern apes eat
  • Fruit, leaves, seeds, insects, and some animal
    prey
  • First evidence of meat eating is use of stone
    tools
  • Were early Homo killing the animals or scavenging
    them?
  • Passive scavenging
  • Confrontational scavenging
  • Hunting

6
Who was Homo erectus?
  • 1.8 MYA
  • Body changes due to environment
  • Increased body size
  • Changes to postcranial skeleton
  • Lengthening of the femur more efficient gait
  • Lived in Africa and was the first hominid to
    leave the continent
  • 1.7 MYA
  • Sometimes called Homo ergaster travelers

7
Homo erectus anatomical features
  • Skull
  • Thick-boned and robust
  • Longer than wide
  • Relatively low and angular from the side
  • Pentagonal in rear view
  • Brain size, larger brains but may just be
    proportional to increased body size
  • Jaw robust
  • Teeth smaller
  • Shovel-shaped incisors

8
Homo erectus anatomical features
  • Body size and shape
  • Only 3 partial postcranial skeletons found
  • Nariokotome boy
  • Found in 1984 in Kenya
  • Tall individuals as adults (5.5 6)
  • Lower limb was long
  • Narrow hipped
  • These proportions similar to latitudinal gradient
    seen in modern humans for dissipating heat
  • Allowing for more activity during the day

9
H. erectus versus H. ergaster
  • Main differences are
  • H. ergaster
  • Region E. Africa (Republic of Georgia)
  • Skeleton Thinner cranial bones Less
    pronounced brow ridges
  • Date 1.8-1.0 MYA
  • H. erectus
  • Region Asia
  • Skeleton Thicker cranial bones more
    pronounced brow ridges
  • Date 1.8-0.05 MYA
  • African forms found in association with more
    advanced tools

10
Homo erectus around the world
  • H. erectus sites range from 1.8 MYA 100,000
    years ago
  • Controversy as to whether H. erectus is found in
    Western Europe
  • Fossils found range from 800,000 to 200,000 years
    ago and may be a different lineage
  • African origins
  • Earliest fossils found all point to Africa

11
Homo erectus around the world
  • Dispersal to East Asia
  • Oldest H. erectus are from an island in Southeast
    Asia, particularly, Java, dated from 1.6-1.8 MYA
  • 1.8 MYA the sea level was much lower and Java was
    not an island but part of the mainland
  • Indonesia first specimen found in 1891
  • Eugene Dubois thought Asia better origin for
    human line because African apes more robust than
    Asian
  • Java Man, just found a skull cap showed large
    brain
  • Later found a femur the showed bipedalism
  • Found only a few Oldowan-like pieces of technology

12
Homo erectus around the world
  • China has youngest but best known
  • 800,000 to 200,000 year old
  • Peking Man found in 1930s
  • Dated from 600,000 to 300,000 years ago
  • Lost during WWII when in mid-30s Japan invaded
    China
  • Fossils in care of US Marines who guarded the
    train from Beijing to coast to be shipped to San
    Francisco
  • Train arrived on 12-7-41 (Pearl Harbor) and
    Marines taken prisoner and fossils never found
  • Have measurements and molds
  • Peking Man had differences in frontal and
    occipital regions but may have reflected
    intermittent isolation
  • Due to glaciations isolation would last 10,000 to
    50,000 years

13
Homo erectus around the world
  • Europe
  • H. erectus like species existed in Europe as long
    ago as 800,000 years ago
  • Fossils of young individuals from age of 3 18
  • Mix of characteristics between Neandertals and
    modern humans
  • Spain H. actecessor based upon characteristics of
    childs partial crania, which may have
    disappeared as it aged

14
Lifeways of Homo erectus
  • H. erectus had two different tool usages
  • Showing they possessed advanced cognitive skills
    and had dietary changes
  • Stone Age
  • Early Stone Age
  • 1.8 1.5 MYA Oldowan type tools
  • 1.4 MYA 250,000 years ago Acheulean tools
  • Biface hand-axes and cleavers
  • First time hominids making standardized tools
  • Holds sharp edge for longer time, greater length
    of worked edge
  • Acheulean tools
  • Hand-axes and cleavers
  • Holds sharp edge for longer time with greater
    length of worked edge
  • Generally convenient size, could be held and used
    without hand fatigue
  • Specifically developed for the butchery of large
    animals
  • May have been used as digging tools (roots /
    tubers), projectiles (thrown), and as a portable
    core carrier (to make flakes)

15
Lifeways of Homo erectus
  • Early Stone Age
  • Movius line, In Asia had Oldowan-like tools but
    not true hand axes until much later
  • Differences in selective pressures or in raw
    materials?
  • Maybe these hominids left Africa before tools
    being used and therefore missed the technology
  • Higher quality of diet
  • 1.8 MYA humans became much more modern, taller,
    more linear, and with larger brain
  • Worldwide geographic expansion
  • Shift in better quality (and more quantity) of
    food
  • Did we become predators?
  • Carnivores small intestine lengthened as large
    intestine shortened meat takes less time to
    process
  • Leisure time increased, population density
    decreased, followed migrating herds
  • Safe to eat even when unsure of plants

16
Lifeways of Homo erectus
  • Human-specific tape worms share a history with
    tapeworms that live in hyenas but diverged from
    them about 1.8 MYA
  • Humans shifted from a mainly vegetarian to meat
    diet
  • Burnt earth (to indicate cooking fire) 1.6 MYA
  • Could have been tuber cooking (baked potato)
  • Not much evidence to support this
  • Life history
  • Evolution proceeds by modifying the developmental
    pattern
  • Produces differences we see in adult form
  • Large brains
  • Humans grow slowly and mature late
  • Extremely K-selective
  • Two growth spurts, Middle of childhood (around
    5), Adolescent (teen years)
  • Teeth show that development of H. erectus was fast

17
H. erectus leaves Africa
  • Emigration meant moving across a variety of
    ecosystems, climates, and ecological settings
  • Move from tropical and subtropical Africa to more
    seasonally cold Northern Hemisphere of Eurasia
    and Far East
  • Requires remarkable adaptability and behavioral
    flexibility to evolve to those conditions in just
    under 2 million years
  • African area cooling and drying 2 MYA,
    diminishing forests with large grasslands between
    them
  • Increase in quantities of animals and hominids to
    eat them
  • Using Oldowan tools to access animal resources
    hominids were not physically adapted to acquire

18
H. erectus leaves Africa
  • Higher-quality animal diet resulted in
  • Growth of larger bodies and greater ranging
  • More linear body shape probably allowed for
    greater midday activity because they coped better
    with the heat
  • Entire dispersal seems long
  • Change in home range of less than 1 mile a
    year
  • Over 10,000 to 15,000 years would be a slow
    dispersal
  • Look geologically instantaneous
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