evo. lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Rise of the Genus Homo

A
  • earliest evolved in Africa.
  • most date 2.4 to 1.8 MYA.
  • first fossil member of taxon: Homo habilis, which means “Handy man”.
  • the idea back then was that only humans used tools
  • some researchers suggest that H. habilis is “junk taxon” and that there may be two or more species of Homo by 2.0 MYA.
  • Human evolution is about branches and not about missing links
  • Hominins evolved in Africa, and H. sapiens characterized by bipedalism, expansion in brain size, and changes in dental/cranial features; these changes are on-going
  • Complex patterns of human biogeography and phylogenetics
  • We are continuing to respond to selective pressures
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2
Q

Species in the Genus Homo

A
  • Homo habilis
  • Homo rudolfensis
  • Homo erectus
  • Homo ergaster
  • Homo heidelbergensis
  • Homo antecessor
  • Homo neanderthalensis
  • Homo naledi
  • Homo floresiensis
  • Homo sapiens
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3
Q

Medical Anthropology

A

a

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4
Q

Forensic Anthropology

A

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5
Q

Homo habilis

A
  • From sites in Tanzania, Kenya, and Ethiopia (2.3-1.6MYA)
  • Species designation: brain size and association with stone tools
  • Skeletal morphology similar to contemporaneous australopithecines
  • First species of Homo or junk taxon?
  • May represent two or more different species (H. rudolfensis and H. habilis)
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6
Q

Homo rudolfensis

A
  • Koobi Fora, Kenya
  • Originally considered H. habilis
  • H. rudolfensis or H. habilis first representative of our genus?
  • Very controversial
  • We don’t know a lot about the first few parts of our cladistics
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7
Q

Homo erectus

A
  • First species in genus Homo found outside Africa (Asia and Southeast Asia)
    • Evolved and somehow transitioned out of their tropical environment
  • 1.8YS-27KYA
  • brain and body size changes in lineage
  • controlled use of fire and hunting
    • the question of scavenging versus hunting is contentious
    • they were able to gather, store, and eat large game
  • early African specimens may be different species, Homo ergaster
  • general consensus that the earliest specimens found in Africa belong to their own species
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8
Q

Homo ergaster

A
  • east and south Africa
  • 1.8-1.3MYA
  • distinguished from H. erectus by its thinner skull-bones and lack of an obviously supraorbital foramen
  • debate on H. erectus or H. ergaster as direct ancestor of modern humans
  • still have large, powerful-looking faces; large brow ridges, flat nose, powerful jaw

Turkana Boy

  • 7-16 years old
  • about 1.6m in height
  • brain size: 880cc, likely 910cc at adulthood
  • very large compared to the predecessors
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9
Q

Homo heidelbergensis

A
  • Europe and Africa
  • 700-130KYA
  • compared to H. erectus and H. heidelbergensis: decreased dentition, and increased body and brain size
  • continues the evolutionary selective pressures, pushing for larger brain and body size
  • this means we’re using less of our teeth as a tool (or weapon), but our energetic cost is increasing (with body size and brains)
  • selection against being powerful and small
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10
Q

Homo antecessor

A
  • Spain
  • 1.2MYA-800KYA
  • controversy surrounding species designation
    • type specimen is juvenile—we don’t know what they’re going to look like when they’re adults
  • first hominin in Europe?
    • We may have sites that H. erectus used in Europe, but no fossils
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11
Q

Homo neanderthalensis

A
  • Europe and middle east (300-35KYA)
  • Buried people in graves with “offerings”
    • We have an enormous amount of material because they were preserved quite well
  • Limb bones heavily marked by muscular attachments; thick walls of cortical bone and large joints
  • Neanderthals are extremely muscular, highly active, and athletic by modern human standards
  • Largest overall cranial capacity of any hominins—their brain capacity was even larger than that of humans
  • Incredibly complex stone tools
  • Did they contribute to the gene pool of modern humans?
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12
Q

Homo naledi

A
  • Discovered in 2013 in south Africa
  • Not dated as of yet
  • Body mass and stature—small-bodied human populations
  • Endrocranial volume was small, similar to Australopithecus
  • Skull shape is like early homo species
  • So, skeleton combines primitive features in australopithecines with features known from hominids
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13
Q

Homo floresiensis

A
  • Flores Island, Indonesia
  • 95-13KYA
  • small body size
  • small brain size
  • primitive and derived features
  • not aberrant individual; rather, unique species
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14
Q

Homo sapiens

A
  • 160KYA in Africa, 100KYA in Middle East, 40KYA in Europe
  • controlled use of fire
  • hunting and gathering
  • cultural remains, including increasingly complex stone tools
  • we have had one of the shortest longevities of any member of our genus
  • why us?
  • Did we hunt and cause extinction in our own genus?
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15
Q

Genetics of Homo neanderthalensis

A
  • Geneticists able to extract DNA from three Neanderthal specimens
  • Early studies: genetics of Neanderthals versus modern humans point to a 706KYA separation and considerable genetic variation
    • But they had to make new methods to test DNA for dead specimens to protect it from our human DNA
  • Recent studies have solved all of the Neanderthal genome
  • Demonstrated a range of genetic contribution to non-African modern humans
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16
Q

Race

A
  • race: geographically circumscribed population or set of populations that differ from all other populations of a species.
    • ​definition used in science.
  • subspecies: geographically isolated populations within species.
    • ​definition specific to biology.​​
  • No biological or phylogenetic ways to define human races
  • Race concepts based on everything from skin color through region(s) or origin to ethnicity
  • Crude classification system typically involves self-identification based on up-bringing, culture, ethnicity, etc.
  • Morphological and genetic differences in human “races” much smaller than those needed to consider nonhuman animals subspecies
17
Q

Skin Colour Adaptation | Race Concept

A
  • Physical traits we think of as clustering together among particular peoples often have much broader distributions
  • They continue well outside of geographic areas in which “race” is stereotypically supposed to exist
  • skin coloration is largely due to natural selection rather than recent shared descent.
18
Q

Medical Anthropology

A

subfield of anthropology that draws upon social, cultural, biological, and linguistic anthropology to better understand those factors which influence health and well being (broadly defined), the experience and distribution of illness, the prevention and treatment of sickness, healing processes, and the social relations or therapy management, and the cultural importance and utilization of pluralistic medical systems.

19
Q

Infectious and Chronic Diseases | Medical Anthropology

A
  • infectious disease: caused by microbial agent
    • death rates by infectious disease between developed countries (low) and developing countries (high)
    • pandemics—with globalization we’re spreading microbial agents through our food, persons, and everything else
    • co-evolution of humans and pathogens
  • chronic disease: non-reversible pathology
    • for example, heart disease
    • “wear and tear” on body
    • comparison of death rates by chronic disease between developed (high) and developing countries (low)
20
Q

Malnutrition and Obesity | Medical Anthropology

A
  • malnutrition crsis
    • developing nations
    • protein malnutrition
    • micronutrient malnutrition
  • obesity crisis
    • developed nations; complex causes
21
Q

Forensic Anthropology

A
  • is “applied” science
  • borrows methods and techniques developed from skeletal biology, osteology, and anatomy; and applies them to cases of forensic importance
  • forensic means “legal”
  • methods and techniques to assess: age, sex, stature, trauma, and pathology to help anthropologists understand different populations living all over the world at different times throughout history
22
Q

Age in Skeletons | Forensic Anthropology

A
  • younger individual is, more accurately their age can be estimated
  • because process of ossification proceeds more rapidly at earlier ages, and there are more developing bones to examine
  • once an individual is more sexually mature, only ranges can be used
23
Q

Sex in Skeletons | Forensic Anthropology

A
  • pronounced difference in shape of pelvis
  • birth canal larger and rounder in females
  • males have narrower pelves, with smaller and less rounded birth canals
24
Q

Stature in Skeletons | Forensic Anthropology

A
  • sexual dimorphism: males are about 15% bigger than females; difference in size is seen in every bone of the body
  • males continue growing longer than females do, by time people reach age 20 females are nearly two years ahead of males in bone development
  • measure the length of femur and humerus to determine height
25
Q

Trauma in Skeletons | Forensic Anthropology

A
  • lesion (pathologically produced feature of a bone; such as TB) vs. bone defect (hole, break, or other traumatic damage)
  • overall nature of bone defect, timing of trauma relative to death
  • pre-mortem
  • post-mortem are more confusing
26
Q

Pathology in Skeletons | Forensic Anthropology

A
  • abnormality that arises from disease, malnutrition, or genetic defect
  • differs from trauma in that pathology is not normally result of an injury