Hominid Evolution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Hominid Evolution

Description:

... most certainly evolved from H. erectus Neanderthals Neanderthals inhabited Europe and the Near East 200,000 to 30,000 years ago Some paleoanthropologists : ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:195
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 58
Provided by: ThomsonB48
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Hominid Evolution


1
Chapter 19
Hominid Evolution
2
Classification Hierarchy (Linnaeus)
  • Kingdom Animal
  • Phylum Chordate
  • Class Mammal
  • Order Primates
  • Family Hominids
  • Genus Homo
  • Species Sapiens

Humans and apes diverged 8 Mya
3
Humans and Apes
  • Diverged 8 million years ago
  • gt12 different forms of hominids since then

4
Oldest Hominid
  • Sahelanthropus tchadensis,
  • the oldest known hominid
  • 7 million years old
  • discovered in 2002 in Chad

5
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
  • Skull found in the African nation of Chad in 2002
  • pushed back the origins of humans to nearly 7
    million years ago
  • its discovery has raised more questions than it
    answered

6
Bushy Model of Human Evolution
  • Paleoanthropologists now think
  • human evolution branched many times
  • rather than evolving in a somewhat straight line
  • Key traits such as
  • upright walking
  • manual dexterity
  • large brain
  • evolved more than once, and produced many
    evolutionary dead-ends

7
Fossil hominids
http//www.nature.com/nature/journal/v418/n6894/fi
g_tab/418133a_F2.html
8
Oldest Hominid
  • Sahelanthropus tchadensis shows a mosaic of
    primitive and advanced features
  • The small brain case and most of the teeth are
    chimplike
  • Fairly flat nose and the prominent brow ridges
  • are features only seen, until now, in the human
    genus Homo
  • Looks more human than hominids that came millions
    of years later!

9
Early History of Ancestral Hominids
  • Much of our knowledge
  • comes from fossils found in a small desert area
    southwest of Cairo, Egypt
  • During the Late Eocene and Oligocene
  • this region was a lush, tropical rain forest
  • supported a diverse and abundant fauna and flora

10
Thousands of Fossil Specimens
  • Several thousand fossil specimens
  • representing more than 20 species of primates
  • recovered from rocks of this region
  • One of the earliest ancestral hominids
  • was Aegyptopithecus,
  • small, fruit-eating, arboreal primate
  • weighed about 5 kg

11
One of the Earliest Ancestral Hominids
  • Skull of Aegyptopithecus zeuxis,
  • one of the earliest known anthropoids
  • 30 Ma

12
Hominids
  • The hominids (family Hominidae)
  • primate family that includes present-day humans
  • fossil record extending back 7 million years
  • Hominids are bipedal
  • that is, they have an upright posture
  • Skeletal structure shows bipedal traits
  • Hominid brain organization larger compared to
    other primates

13
Comparison of Locomotion
  • Comparison between quadrupedal and bipedal
    locomotion
  • in gorillas and humans
  • In gorillas the ischium bone is long
  • and the entire pelvis is tilted toward the
    horizontal

14
Comparison of Locomotion
  • Comparison between quadrupedal and bipedal
    locomotion
  • in gorillas and humans
  • In humans the ischium bone is much shorter
  • and the pelvis is vertical

15
Hominids Larger Reorganized Brain
  • In addition, hominids show a trend
  • toward a large and internally reorganized brain
  • A large brain size and organization
  • is apparent in the brain of a present-day human

16
Response to Climatic Changes
  • Many anthropologists think
  • hominid features evolved in response to major
    climatic changes
  • During this time
  • vast savannas replaced the African tropical rain
    forests
  • where the lower primates had been so abundant

17
Mixed Forests and Grasslands
  • As the savannas and grasslands continued to
    expand
  • hominids made the transition from true forest
    dwelling
  • to life in an environment of mixed forests and
    grasslands

18
Geologic Age Ranges
19
Oldest Known Hominid
  • Discovered in Chad in 2002
  • nearly 7-million-year-old skull and dental
    remains of Sahelanthropus tchadensis
  • make it the oldest known hominid yet unearthed

20
Australopithecus
  • Australopithecines are early hominids
  • genus Australopithecus
  • Currently, five species are recognized
  • A. anamensis
  • A. afarensis
  • A. africanus
  • A. robustus
  • A. boisei

21
Evolutionary Scheme
  • Many paleontologists accept that
  • A. anamensis
  • the oldest known australopithecine,
  • is ancestral to A. afarensis,
  • who in turn is ancestral to A. africanus
  • and the genus Homo,
  • as well as the side branch of australopithecines
  • represented by A. robustus and A. boisei

22
Lucy
  • A reconstruction of Lucys skeleton
  • Lucy is a 3.5-million-year-old
  • Australopithecus afarensis
  • Knees worked like modern human knees
  • Makes 40 bigger than females
  • Males had large crests on the tops of their skulls

23
Hominid Footprints
  • Preserved in volcanic ash in Tanzania
  • Discovered in 1978
  • Proved hominids were bipedal walkers at least 3.5
    million years ago

24
Hominid Footprints
  • Most scientists think the footprints
  • were made by Australopithecus afarensis
  • whose fossils are found nearby

25
Brain Size of A. afarensis
  • A. afarensis had a brain size of 380450 cubic
    centimeters (cc),
  • larger than the 300400 cc of a chimpanzee
  • much smaller than that of present-day humans
    (1350 cc average)

26
Apelike Features
  • The skull of A. afarensis retained many apelike
    features
  • massive brow ridges
  • forward-jutting jaw
  • teeth were intermediate between those of apes and
    humans
  • The heavily enameled molars
  • adaptation to chewing fruits, seeds, and roots

27
Landscape with A. afarensis
  • Re-creation of a Pliocene landscape
  • showing members of
  • Australo-pithecus afarensis
  • gathering and eating
  • various fruits and seeds

28
Skull of A. africanus
  • A reconstruction of the skull
  • of Australopithecus africanus
  • This skull,
  • known as that of the Taung Child,
  • was discovered by Raymond Dart in South Africa in
    1924
  • and marks the beginning of modern
    paleoanthropology

29
Not As Well Adapted for Bipedalism
  • It appears the limbs
  • of A. africanus may not have been as well adapted
    for bipedalism as those of A. afarensis

30
The Human Lineage handy man
  • Homo habilis
  • The earliest member of our own genus Homo
  • lived 2.5-1.6 million years ago
  • H. habilis evolved from the A. afarensis and A.
    africanus lineage
  • coexisted with A. africanus for about 200,000
    years

31
Geologic Age Ranges
  • The geologic age ranges
  • for the commonly accepted species of hominids

32
Characteristics of Homo habilis
  • H. habilis had a larger brain (700 cc average)
  • than its australopithecine ancestors but smaller
    teeth
  • It was about 1.2-1.3 m tall and weighed 32-37 kg

33
Homo Erectus
  • In contrast to the australopithecines and H.
    habilis,
  • which are unknown outside Africa,
  • Homo erectus was a widely distributed species
  • migrated from Africa during the Pleistocene
  • Specimens have been found
  • not only in Africa
  • also in Europe, India, China ("Peking Man"), and
    Indonesia ("Java Man")

34
Survived in Asia Until About 100,000 Years Ago
  • H. erectus evolved in Africa 1.8 million years
    ago
  • and by 1 million years ago
  • was present in southeastern and eastern Asia,
  • where it survived until about 100,000 years ago

35
H. erectus Differed From Modern Humans
  • Although H. erectus developed regional variations
    in form,
  • the species differed from modern humans in
    several ways
  • Its brain size of 800-1300 cc,
  • though much larger than that of H. habilis,
  • was still less than the average for Homo sapiens
    (1350 cc)

36
Size Similar to Humans
  • H. erectus's skull was thick-walled
  • face was massive
  • prominent brow ridges
  • teeth were slightly larger than those of
    present-day humans
  • H. erectus was comparable to size to modern
    humans
  • between 1.6 and 1.8 m tall
  • weighing between 53 and 63 kg

37
Skull of Homo erectus
  • A reconstruction of the skull of Homo erectus
  • a widely distributed species
  • whose remains have been found in Africa, Europe,
    India, China, and Indonesia

38
H. erectus Was a Tool Maker
  • The archaeological record indicates
  • that H. erectus was a tool maker
  • Furthermore, some sites show evidence
  • that its members used fire and lived in caves
  • an advantage for those living in more northerly
    climates

39
Homo erectus Using Tools
  • Re-creation of a Pleistocene setting in Europe
  • in which members of Homo erectus are
  • using fire and stone tools

40
The "Out of Africa" View
  • Currently, a heated debate surrounds the
    transition
  • from H. erectus to our own species Homo sapiens
  • Out of Africa" view
  • early modern humans evolved from a small African
    colony
  • offspring then migrated from Africa and populated
    Europe and Asia, driving the earlier hominid
    populations to extinction

41
The "Multiregional" View
  • Multiregional" view
  • early modern humans did not have an isolated
    origin in Africa
  • established separate populations throughout
    Eurasia
  • Occasional contact and interbreeding
  • enabled our species to maintain its overall
    cohesiveness
  • still preserving the regional differences in
    people we see today

42
Homo sapiens Evolved From H. erectus
  • Regardless of which theory turns out to be
    correct,
  • our species, H. sapiens, most certainly evolved
    from H. erectus

43
Neanderthals
  • Neanderthals
  • inhabited Europe and the Near East
  • 200,000 to 30,000 years ago
  • Some paleoanthropologists
  • as a Neanderthals are a subspecies of our own
    species (Homo sapiens neanderthalensis)
  • Others separate species (Homo neanderthalensis)

44
Neanderthals Difference
  • Main difference between Neanderthals and
    present-day humans is in the skull
  • Neanderthal skulls were long and low
  • heavy brow ridges, a projecting mouth, and a
    weak, receding chin
  • Their brain was slightly larger on average
  • than our own, and somewhat differently shaped

45
Neanderthal Skull
  • Reconstructed Neanderthal skull
  • The Neanderthals were characterized
  • by prominent heavy brow ridges and weak chin

46
First Humans in Cold Climates
  • Given the specimens from more than 100 sites
  • we now know Neanderthals were not much different
    from us, only more robust
  • Europe's Neanderthals were the first humans
  • to move into truly cold climates
  • enduring miserably long winters and short summers
  • as they pushed north into tundra ecosystems

47
Burial Ceremony in a Cave
  • Archaeological evidence indicates
  • Neanderthals lived in caves
  • and participated in ritual burials
  • as depicted in this painting of a burial ceremony
  • such as occurred approximately 60,000 years ago
  • at Shanidar Cave, Iraq

48
Cro-Magnons
  • About 30,000 years ago
  • humans closely resembling modern Europeans
  • moved into the region inhabited by the
    Neanderthals and completely replaced them
  • Cro-Magnons
  • successors of the Neanderthals in France
  • 35,000 to 10,000 years ago
  • huge advances in development of art and
    technology

49
Cave Painters
  • Cro-Magnons were cave painters
  • Using paints made from manganese and iron oxides
  • painted hundreds of scenes on the ceilings and
    walls of caves in France and Spain
  • many of them are still preserved today

50
Painting From a Cave in France
  • Cro-Magnons were very skilled cave painters
  • Painting of a horse
  • from the cave of Niaux, France

51
Cultural Evolution
  • With the appearance of Cro-Magnons,
  • human evolution has become almost entirely
    cultural rather than biological
  • Humans have spread throughout the world
  • by devising means to deal with a broad range of
    environmental conditions

52
Summary
  • Aegyptopithecus 32 Ma (ancestral hominid
    primate)
  • Somewhat developed forehead
  • Australopithecus 5 Ma (early hominids)
  • Afarensis (Lucy) 4 Ma, bipedalism, still tree
    climbers, small skull
  • Africanus 2-3 Ma slightly larger brain
  • Homo habilis 2 Ma
  • Larger brain, less pronounced brow, rounder head,
    smaller face
  • Use of stone tools
  • Homo erectus 500 K-2Ma
  • Larger brain and body
  • Longer skull, large brow ridges
  • Homo sapiens neanderthalensis 200 K
  • Large brains and bodies, lack of frontal lobes?
  • Homo sapiens sapiens (cro-magnon) 90 K
  • Anatomically similar to humans

53
Climate in Human History
  • Peak of glaciation 18 Ka
  • Present interglacial began 10 Ka
  • Climatic Optimum
  • 6-7 Ka
  • First great civilizations in Middle East
  • Some collapsed 3 Ka when climate changed
  • Subatlantic Deterioration
  • 2.5 Ka
  • Reflected in art and invasions

54
Climate in Human History
  • Drought and famine
  • Location of settlements
  • Exploration
  • Medieval Warm Period began 950 A.D.
  • Little Ice Age 1550-1850 A.D.

55
Vikings
  • Settled Greenland and Iceland during Medieval
    Warm Period
  • During Little Ice Age, Greenland was abandoned
    and Iceland struggling
  • Ice blocked trade routes, cold weather caused
    poor harvests
  • Fish moved southward

56
Climate reflected in art
  • Little Ice Age at its peak during 2nd epoch

www2.sunysuffolk.edu/mandias/lia/little_ice_age.ht
ml
57
Recent History
  • Two centuries of warm, mild climate
  • Continual drying of northern Africa
  • Interglacial should be coming to an end will
    humans prolong it?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com