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Homo Sapiens and the Upper Paleolithic

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When did anatomically modern forms of Homo sapiens appear? ... took over cutting, softening, and clamping functions once performed by the teeth. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Homo Sapiens and the Upper Paleolithic


1
Chapter 10
  • Homo Sapiens and the Upper Paleolithic

2
Chapter Outline
  • When did anatomically modern forms of Homo
    sapiens appear?
  • What was the culture of Upper Paleolithic peoples
    like?
  • When and how did humans spread to Australia and
    the Americas?

3
Homo Sapiens and the Upper Paleolithic
  • By 30,000 y.a. populations in all parts of the
    inhabited world resembled modern humans.
  • People refined adaptations to local conditions,
    and expanded into new regions.
  • Biological consequences included reduction of the
    face to modern proportions, and the reduction of
    body mass.

4
Cultural Adaptations in the Upper Paleolithic
  • Tools took over cutting, softening, and clamping
    functions once performed by the teeth.
  • This resulted in a reduction in the size of the
    teeth and jaws.
  • Technological improvements reduced selective
    pressures that had favored massive, robust bodies.

5
Upper Paleolithic Tools
  • Pressure flaking was used to press off small
    flakes as the final step in stone tool making.
  • Burins were used to work bone, horn, antler, and
    ivory into fishhooks, harpoons, and eyed needles.

6
Upper Paleolithic Tools
  • Spear-throwers added to the efficiency of the
    spear as a hunting tool.
  • Nets made from the fibers of wild plants were
    used in net hunting.
  • Bow and arrow was invented.

7
Upper Paleolithic Art
  • Carvings in tool handles
  • Statues
  • Cave paintings
  • Bone flutes and whistles

8
The Spread of Upper Paleolithic Peoples
  • Expanded into regions previously uninhabited by
    their archaic forebears.
  • Colonization of Siberia began 42,000 y.a.
  • 10,000 years later they reached the northeastern
    part of that region.

9
The Spread of Upper Paleolithic Peoples
  • 60,000 y.a., people arrived in Australia and New
    Guinea.
  • They crossed at least 90 kilometers of water that
    separated Australia and New Guinea from the Asian
    continent throughout Paleolithic times.

10
The Spread of Upper Paleolithic Peoples
  • The first Americans may have come by boat.
  • They may have traveled between islands or
    ice-free pockets of coastline, from as far away
    as the Japanese islands and down North Americas
    northwest coast.

11
Major Paleolithic Trends Tools
  • Tools became more sophisticated, varied, and
    specialized.
  • Tools were lighter and smaller, with a better
    ratio between length of cutting edge and weight
    of stone.
  • Tools were specialized according to region and
    function.

12
Major Paleolithic Trends Hunting
  • Tools were developed that exceeded other animals
    physical equipment spear thrower, net hunting,
    bow and arrow.
  • Improved social organization and cooperation were
    important for survival and population growth.

13
Major Paleolithic Trends Regionalism
  • Due to two factors
  • Perceived need to distinguish symbolically ones
    own people from others.
  • The need to adapt to differing environments.
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