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Human Evolution

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Human Evolution

Homo Sapiens



Homo Neanderthalensis





Homo Erectus





Homo

Heidelbergensis



Homo Habilis Homo Robustus





Homo Ergaster









Australopithecus Paranthropus

Africanus Aethiopicus



Australopithecus

Afarensis

History of Man









SPECIES TIME PERIOD





Ardipithicus ramidus 5 to 4 million years ago





Australopithecus anamensis 4.2 to 3.9 million years ago





Australopithecus afarensis 4 to 2.7 million years ago





Australopithecus africanus 3 to 2 million years ago





Australopithecus robustus 2.2 to 1.6 million years ago





Homo habilis 2.2 to 1.6 million years ago





Homo erectus 2.0 to 0.4 million years ago





Homo sapiens archaic 400 to 200 thousand years ago





Homo sapiens neandertalensis 200 to 30 thousand years ago





Homo sapiens sapiens 200 thousand years ago to present

Earliest Ancestors

Plesiadapis: 60 mya

- one of the oldest known primate

-like mammal species

- Mainly lived on the ground

- However, it was a good climber.

- It was an arboreal quadruped.

- It was a tree-moving, 4-legged animal.



What was the selective pressure for our

ancestors to evolve?

What happened about 65 mya?



Why were they more fit than dinosaurs

in the changing environment?

Primate Evolution



Prosimians: 55 mya

Generally nocturnal,

generalized diets.



Includes lemurs, lorises,

bushbabies.



Emergence of opposable

thumb.

Primate Evolution

New World Monkeys Old World Monkeys

Lateral nostrils Downward nostrils

Prehensile tail Short or absent tail (not

prehensile)









Why did they diverge?

Because they were reproductively and geographically isolated from each other by the

growing separation between the African and South American continents.

So as those two continents moved apart, climates changed and new selectional pressures

arose.

Primate to Hominid Evolution



Old World Monkeys New World Monkeys



A subset of old world monkeys. All of the

same differences from new world monkeys

Hominoids but an extra set of differences unique to

hominoids.





Part of the superfamily Hominoids.

Hominids Specifically include:

- humans

- orangutans

- gorillas

- chimpanzees

Hominid Evolution

Key Characteristics of Hominids (chimpanzees, gorillas, humans, and

orangutans):

- Jaws: humans have a bowed jaw,

rather than a U- shaped.

- Apes have diastema (spaces

between teeth), we lack diastema.



- Skeletal changes associated with bipedality



- Cranial changes – development of forehead

- Loss of brow ridges

- Loss of sagittal crest – the ridge of bone

running lengthwise along the midline

of the top of many mammalian skulls.

Hominid Evolution

Key Characteristics of Hominids (chimpanzees, gorillas, humans,

and orangutans):

- Skeletal changes associated with bipedality



Why?

Climate/environmental change – forests began to shrink and savannah began to expand





Take a moment and

write down possible

explanations for bipedalism.

Hominid Evolution

Key Characteristics of Hominids (chimpanzees, gorillas, humans,

and orangutans):

- Loss of sagittal crest – the ridge of bone

running lengthwise along the midline

of the top of many mammalian skulls.





Animals that do a lot of heavy chewing have a sagittal crest. It is needed for exceptionally

Strong jaw muscles.



Take a look at the sagittal crest on the right. It takes up a lot of room on the head and skull.

If we no longer had the huge crest on the top of the head, what would be allowed to happen?

We now have room to expand our skulls and, therefore, our brains!

Hominid Evolution



Lucy: Australopithecus afarensis

3.6 – 2.9 mya

- 1 meter tall

- Bipedal

- Partly arboreal

- Ape-like face with

sloping forehead

Hominid Evolution



Australopithecines: 2.2 mya

-Bipedal, dentally similar to

humans but smaller brain

- Slender

- Some may have used

tools

- Extension of cool,

dry, savannah habitat

Hominid Evolution

Now we start with the Homo line of Hominid Evolution



The organisms we will talk about will

have a two part name: Homo _______



Homo refers to our genus

(which includes humans and our close relatives).



The second part of the name identifies the species.

Hominid Evolution

Homo habilis: 2.4 – 1.6 mya

-Similar to australopithecines

Because face is still primitive



-Smaller face, jaw and teeth



-Larger cranial capacity



-Primitive stone tools

Hominid Evolution

Homo Erectus: 1.8 – 0.3 mya

-Similar to habilis: protruding

jaws with large molars, no chin

thick brow ridges, a long low

skull.



-More advanced tools.



-Spread from Africa to Europe

and Asia.

Hominid Evolution

Homo neanderthalensis: 230,000-30,000 years ago

- By 130,000 years ago, following a

prolonged period of independent evolution

in Europe, Neanderthals were so anatomically

distinct that they are best classified as a

separate species

This is a great example of geographic isolation

leading to a speciation event.



-Brain larger than modern humans.



-Midfacial area protruded perhaps an

adaptation to cold.



-Short and solid with short limbs because of the cold.

Hominid Evolution

Homo sapiens sapiens:

modern

Out – of – Africa Theory

Modern humans evolved relatively recently in Africa,

migrated into Eurasia and replaced all populations

which had descended from Homo erectus.

- after Homo erectus migrated out of Africa, the different populations became

reproductively isolated, evolving independently, and in some cases like the

Neanderthals, into separate species

- Homo sapiens arose in one place, probably Africa (geographically this includes

the Middle East)

- Homo sapiens ultimately migrated out of Africa and replaced all other

human populations, without interbreeding

- modern human variation is a relatively recent phenomenon



We know this is true because every single human being across the planet has the

same innate and learned behavior skill set.



We can also interbreed successfully with humans across the planet.

• So what are vestigial “organs”?

– Homologous structures of organisms that have

seemingly lost all or most of their original function

in a species through evolution.



Can you think of any vestigial “organs” or behaviors?

-Tail bone

- Goose bumps in terms of defense.

- Infants will instinctively grasp any object which touches

the palm ancestral primates would have had

sufficient body hair for an infant to cling to,

allowing its mother to escape rapidly from

danger.

-Moro reflex

-Ear muscles

-Babies can swim before they walk

-Wisdom teeth

-Pruney fingers



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