4/18 Lecture - Hominin Evolution - Early Homo Flashcards

1
Q

Ledi-Geraru

A

Oldest known Homo, Found in Ethiopia

  • mandible is the only fossil discovered*
    - Uniform Depth across mandible b/w Ledi-Geraru and Homo
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2
Q

Distinguish Early Homos*

A

1) Large Brain Size
2) Small Cheek teeth
3) Orthognactic jaws
4) Shape of Mandible (Ramus)

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3
Q

Australopithecus Sediba = split

A

Controversial*

                     Primative Traits:

                                                 - small brain
                                                 - long arms/short legs

Derived Features identifying as Homo:

                                                                - orthognactic/ homo-like mandible *
                                                                 - small molars
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4
Q

Homo Erectus (Triple L)

A

KNM - ER 3733

derived traits :

                    - Large ROBUST face:
                    - Large brow - supraorbital torus
                    - Long Legs/ Tall Stature
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5
Q

Homo erectus : First hominin to have all Feat.s *

A

KNM - ER 3733

                                                    - Big Brain size
                                                    - Small Cheek Teeth
                                                    - Orthognactic Face
                                                    - Modern stature/ limb proportions
                                                    - No evidence of climbing adaptations
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6
Q

3 - Striding

A

Hominin Adaptations

  1. Bipedal locomotion -> 1. Striding : more efficient/ dedicated biped/ loss of climbing abilities
  2. Large molars -> 2. Reduction of Cheek Teeth/ large to small/ mega DONT
  3. Tool Use -> 3. Mode 1 & 2 Tool use
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7
Q

H. erectus -> derived features (football head)

A

occipital torus - a horizontal ridge at the back of the skull / pointed appearance when viewed from the side.

supraorbital torus - shell-like browridge.

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8
Q

Mode 2 tools

A

Acheulean industry

biface - toolmaker strikes a boulder to claim a core
THEN flakes this core on all sides

= Creates a flattened form with a sharp edge along its entire circumference

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9
Q

Types of Mode 2 Bifaces

A

1) hand ax –> shaped like a teardrop and has a sharp point at the narrow end
2) A cleaver –> a lozenge-shaped biface with a flat, sharp edge on one end
3) a pick –> a thicker, more triangular biface

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10
Q

Hand axes were probably used for…? *

A

1) Butchering large animals.
2) Dispensing flake tools.
- Hand axes weren’t tools at all/ hominins struck flakes to be used for many everyday purposes.
3) Woodworking.
- Hand axes were used to shape spears, throwing sticks, and digging sticks.

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11
Q

Ranks of Three categories: how difficult it is to acquire food resources?

A

1) Collected foods
- directly taken from environment.
- Examples include ripe fruit and leaves.

2) Extracted foods : don’t move but are protected in some way.
- must be processed before eaten.
- Ex. hard-shelled fruits, tubers/termites buried, honey in hives high in trees, and plants toxins

3) Hunted foods: things that run away and must be caught or trapped.
- may also need to be extracted and processed before consumption.
- Vertebrate prey are the prime example of hunted foods for both humans and chimpanzees.

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12
Q

3 traits that make it easier to learn complex foraging methods:

A

1) larger brains,
2) a prolonged juvenile period, *
3) a longer life span

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13
Q

home bases

A

a temporary gathering spot, where food is shared, processed, cooked, and eaten

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14
Q

knapping

A

1 : to break with a quick blow especially :
- to shape (something, such as flints) by breaking off pieces

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15
Q

cortex

A

the rough, unknapped (unstricken) surface of the stone

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16
Q

Taphonomy (Toph)

A

The study of the processes of site formation:
- to study the processes that produce archaeological sites.