Title: Characteristics of Primates
1Characteristics of Primates
- Shortened snout- relay more on sense of sight
then sound. - Reduced number of teeth
2Related to eyes and ears
- natural selection acted to position the eyes best
for taking in the most visual stimuli.
Stereoscopic vision
3Related to arms and legsbrachiation
- Clavicles (collarbones)
- Why? Primates have very extensive shoulder motion
because the clavicle provides the only bony link
between the upper limb and the trunk. - Two separate bones in the forearm and lower leg
- Why? Having two bones allows for better limb
motion and more precise movements
4Related to fingers and toes
- Nails instead of claws
- Why? Nails allow primates to manipulate objects
more easily. - Increased use of thumbs. Opposable thumb.
5Primate Evolutionary Trends
- Trend toward more vertical posture
- Why? Primates tend to move with a more vertical
posture, even if they are rarely upright.
6Trend toward longer lives with long infancy,
childhood and adulthood
- born with brains that still need to develop
- a lot of time learning skills and strategies for
food gathering and survival from their mothers
and others in their social groups.
7Bipedalism Why?
- Bipedalism Why?
- 1. Provisioning behavior with the upper limbs
used to transport food - factor for bipedality by directly improving
offspring survivorship and increasing
reproductive rate. - 2. reduction in heat gain and facilitation of
heat dissipation
8Advantages of Bipedalism
- With its radically different anatomy, bipedalism
clearly was an adaptation to terrestrial living,
but was it an advantage over quadrapedalism? - Not necessarily faster, but likely sustainable
over long distances - Protection from predators?
- Latest evidence for earliest hominids puts them
in forested environment, not open habitat - Did free hands for tool-using, but what tools
or possibly food transport?
9- Teachers' Domain Walking Tall
- Evolution Library Topic Page ( scroll to Laetoli
footprints )
10Comparisons
11Go to study guide 129 . You need to know about 7
of your ancestors
- Becoming Human Paleoanthropology, Evolution and
Human Origins
12Evolution timeline/ Australopithecus afarensis
(4-2.5 mya)
13A. africanis 3-2.5 mya
- Becoming Human Paleoanthropology, Evolution and
Human Origins ( go to A africanus )
14A robustus (2-1 mya)
- Human evolution - A look at human origins through
species profiles and hominid imagery
15To be of the genus Homo
- (1) prolonged maturation of infants, including an
extended period during which they required
intensive care from their parents - (2) special bonds of sharing and exclusive
mating between particular males and females,
called pair-bonding and - (3) the focus of social activity at a home base,
a safe refuge in a special location known to
family or group members.
16Now here we come the Homo
- Earliest homo is H hablis
- 2.2 to 1.6 million years ago in east Africa.
- H. habilis brains are about 30 larger than those
of A. africanus - Sexual dimorphism
- lived--open bush and savannah country in east
Africa.
17Sexual Dimorphism
- Male skull male/female comparison
18Handy man can use tools
- bones found are still apelike
- could manipulate objects with precision. Stone
artifacts include tools , Oldowan industry, and
though they are crude they do indicate that H.
habilis could shape stone.
19Homo erectus
- Human evolution - A look at human origins through
species profiles and hominid imagery
20Characteristics of H erectus 1.7-1.8 mya
leaving Africa
- lived from approximately 2 million to around
400,000 years ago. - large brained species from 900 to 1200 cc.
fifty-percent increase in brain size over the
older Homo habilis. - falls within the range of modern humans
- Controlled fire
21- much more developed lithic industries, the
controlled use of fire, regular meat-eating,
hunting, etc. - recognize these pattern of anatomy and behavior
as human. The material culture - Achuelian stone tools (see Paleolithic), a
variety of tools fashioned from wood - use of fire
- seasonally occupied, oval-shaped huts
22Homo erectus was a widespread early human
species.
- Two theories regarding movement out of Africa
23Two hypothesis on leaving Africa
- Multiregional hypothesis
- Out of Africa hypothesis
- Rediscovering Biology - Unit 9 Human Evolution
Animations and Images (go to human migration
patterns) - Atlas of the Human Journey - The Genographic
Project
24- Origins of Modern Humans Multiregional or Out of
Africa by Donald Johanson, Ph.D. Read this
article.
25The multiregional hypothesis
- "Multiregional" hypothesis
- diversity resulted from the evolution of
distinctive traits (through adaptation and
genetic drift) in different geographical regions - became established in early populations of Homo
erectus and persisted through the modern people.
This persistence is known as regional continuity.
26Out of Africa Theory / Eve theory
- Rediscovering Biology - Unit 9 Human Evolution
Animations and Images
27Homo Neanderthals 500,000years ago
- http//www.geocities.com/palaeoanthropology/OutofA
frica.html
28- Neanderthal man, or Homo neanderthalensis
- jutting nose set in a large face with massive
brow ridges and no chin. - 190,000 years ago, they lived across Europe and
the southwest of Asia, from Britain in the West
to Iraq in the East.
29- short stocky body - ideal shape for conserving
heat. - extremely muscular - Ice Age lifestyle. This
physique developed early in childhood
30Meat-eating hunters
- The Neanderthals were committed carnivores, and
in order to obtain enough animal meat to survive,
they needed to be skilled hunters. Neanderthals
hunted bison, auroch (an ancestor of living
cattle), deer, reindeer and musk ox, to name but
a few.
31- Social relations were important to the
Neanderthals, and these were maintained through
language. The Neanderthal hyoid bone, which holds
the voice box in place, shows they were capable
of complex speech. But their sentences were
probably basic.
32- Evidence of care for sick, old, injured
individuals - Neanderthal burials include some individuals with
incapacitating injuries, who nevertheless lived a
long time after them - thus presumably cared for by others
- La Chapelle-aux-Saints
- old male (45) with incapacitating arthritis of
jaw, back, hip, and almost no teeth
33- Ritual, art, etc.
- almost none
- no cave art, no figurines, no carvings
- none of that until modern H. sapiens appears
- Did bury their dead
34- But the appearance of modern humans in Europe
40,000 years ago placed Neanderthals in direct
competition with our ancestors for resources. It
was a competition the Neanderthals would lose.
Around 28,000 years ago, the last Neanderthals
died out.
35Compare skulls of Neanderthals and sapiens
- NOVA Online Neanderthals on Trial Casts of
Characters
36Homo sapiens 140,000 70,000years ago
- a brain size between 1350-1400cc and are the
closest species to modern humans, emerging
100,000 years ago. The brain-to-body ratio is
high and the forebrain, the seat of reason, is
exceptionally large. They were the first known
verbal communicators, having speech abilities,
and were the first artists.
37- Around 120,000 emerged as a new species,
- central East Africa, migrated into the Middle
East, south Africa, Europe, central Asia, and
finally into the New World.
38- There is good evidence that oceangoing boats were
constructed by humans by 60,000 years ago. We
tend to think of early humans as hillside "cave
dwellers" and in inland areas they often were
but they were also early voyagers and harvesters
on the waves.
39Homo sapiens art and culture
- a classic example of the Cro-Magnons exceptional
artistic ablility. In this painting we see a
horse found in a cave at Niaux, France. (Wicander
and Monroe 1993)
40- Culture can affect the direction of human
evolution by creating non-biological solutions to
environmental challenges. This potentially
reduces the need to evolve genetic responses to
the challenges.
41If you need further review look here
- Becoming Human Paleoanthropology, Evolution and
Human Origins - A Science Odyssey You Try It Human Evolution
Text Version - Human evolution - A look at human origins through
species profiles and hominid imagery
42- Culture can affect the direction of human
evolution by creating non-biological solutions to
environmental challenges. This potentially
reduces the need to evolve genetic responses to
the challenges.
43Symbolic Thought, Language, Art, and Religion
- The evolution of cultural behavior relates
directly to the development of the human brain,
and particularly the cerebral cortex, the part of
the brain that allows abstract thought, beliefs,
and expression through language. - Humans have evolved a form of communication
language -- that involves the use of symbols
44Taxonomy of human
- Kingdom Animalia
- Phylum Chordata
- Class Mammalia
- Order Primate
- Family Hominidae
- Genus Homo
- Species sapien
- Subspecies sapien
45- Evolution Library Birth of a Language
- Evolution Library Susan Blackmore Memetic
Evolution