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Paleoanthropology: Reconstructing Early Hominid Behavior and Ecology

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Title: Paleoanthropology: Reconstructing Early Hominid Behavior and Ecology


1
Chapter 9
  • Paleoanthropology Reconstructing Early Hominid
    Behavior and Ecology

2
Chapter Outline
  • Definition of Hominid
  • The Strategy of Paleoanthropology
  • Paleoanthropology in ActionOlduvai Gorge
  • Dating Methods
  • Excavations at Olduvai
  • Experimental Archaeology
  • Reconstruction of Early Hominid Environments and
    Behavior

3
Definition of Hominid
  • Characteristics significant in defining hominids
  • Large brain size
  • Tool making behavior
  • Bipedal locomotion

4
Patterns of Evolution
  • Mosaic evolution
  • Evolutionary pattern in which physiological and
    behavioral systems evolve at different rates.
  • Biocultural evolution
  • Biology makes culture possible and developing
    culture further influences biological evolution.

5
Biocultural Evolution The Human Capacity for
Culture
  • The earliest hominids of 7-5 m.y.a. did not
    regularly manufacture stone tools.
  • Stone tools appear in the archaeological record
    about 2.5 m.y.a.
  • The dynamics between neuronal reorganization,
    tool use, changing social organization, and
    communication form the core of biocultural
    evolution.

6
Paleoanthropology
  • Paleoanthropologists use the skills of several
    disciplines to reconstruct the anatomy, behavior,
    and ecology of our ancestors
  • Geologists work with anthropologists to locate
    potential early hominid sites.
  • Archeologists excavate the site and search for
    hominid traces.

7
Dating Methods
  • Paleoanthropologists use two types of dating
    methods to tell us the age of sites and fossils
  • Relative dating determines only whether an object
    is older or younger than other objects.
  • Chronometric (absolute) dating provides an
    estimate of age in years based on radioactive
    decay.

8
Relative Dating Techniques
  • Stratigrapy - based on the law of superposition,
    that a lower stratum (layer) is older than a
    higher stratum.
  • Fluorine analysis applies to buried bones and
    groundwater seepage. Bones incorporate fluorine
    during fossilization.
  • Biostratigraphy - related to changes in the
    dentition of animals.
  • Paleomagnetism - based on the shifting of the
    geomagnetic pole.

9
Chronometric Dating Techniques
  • The age of an object can be determined by
    measuring the rate of disintegration
  • Potassium/argon (k/Ar) dating involves the decay
    of potassium into argon gas. K/Ar has a half-life
    of 1.25 billion years.
  • Carbon-14 is a radiometric method commonly used
    by archeologists. Carbon 14 has a half-life of
    5730 years.

10
Major PaleoanthropologicalProjects
11
Paleoanthropology in Action-Olduvai Gorge
  • Yielded the greatest quantity of high-quality
    data on early hominid behavior.
  • The earliest hominid site dates to about 1.85
    m.y.a., and is accompanied by the Oldowan tool
    industry.
  • The most famous hominid fossil from Olduvai is
    the Zinjanthropus skull, discovered by Mary
    Leakey in 1959.

12
Excavations at Olduvai
  • Three broadly defined site types present at
    Olduvai.
  • Butchering localities - one or a few large
    mammals associated with archaeological traces.
  • Quarry localities - areas where hominids obtained
    stone and initially fashioned stone tools.
  • Multipurpose localities (campsites) - where
    hominids carried out daily activities.

13
Stone Tool (Lithic) Technology
  • The most commonly preserved aspect of hominid
    cultural behavior.
  • Initially, archaeologists thought the Oldowan
    industry consisted of deliberately fashioned
    cores and flakes.
  • Richard Potts believes that only the flakes were
    being deliberately produced, and the core tools
    were merely byproducts of flake manufacture.

14
Flake and Core
15
Direct Percussion
16
Pressure Flaking
17
The Bipedal Adaptation
  • Efficient bipedalism among primates is found only
    among hominids.
  • All the major structural changes required for
    bipedalism are seen in early hominids from East
    and South Africa.
  • Some researchers believe these early humans also
    spent considerable time in the trees.

18
Possible Factors Influencing the Evolution of
Bipedalism
Factor Speculated Influence
Carrying objects Upright posture freed the arms to carry various objects (including offspring)
Hunting Carrying weapons made hunting more efficient long-distance walking may have been more energetically efficient
19
Possible Factors Influencing the Evolution of
Bipedalism
Factor Speculated Influence
Seed and nut gathering Feeding on seeds and nuts occurred while standing upright
Cooling Vertical posture exposes less of the body to direct sun increased exposure to breezes
Visual surveillance Standing up provided better view of potential predators as well as other group members
20
Possible Factors Influencing the Evolution of
Bipedalism
Factor Speculated Influence
Long-distance walking Covering long distances was more efficient for a biped than for a quadruped mechanical reconstructions show that bipedal walking is less energetically costly than quadrupedalism
Male provisioning Males carried back resources to dependent females and young
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