1 / 17

Hominin Evolution Evolutionary Psychology Spring 2019 Dr Chapman

Hominin Evolution Evolutionary Psychology Spring 2019 Dr Chapman. Evolutionary and Geological Time Lines. Evolutionary and Geological Timelines is a table showing important changes in the evolution of earth. Tree of Life diagram shows relationship of major groups Family Trees

lei
Télécharger la présentation

Hominin Evolution Evolutionary Psychology Spring 2019 Dr Chapman

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hominin Evolution Evolutionary PsychologySpring 2019Dr Chapman

  2. Evolutionary and Geological Time Lines • Evolutionary and Geological Timelines is a table showing important changes in the evolution of earth. • Tree of Life diagram shows relationship of major groups • Family Trees • Vertebrate Family Tree • Mammalian Family Tree • See Also: Transformation and diversification in early mammal evolution • Primate Family Tree

  3. Hominin Family Tree • Milestones in Human Evolutionary History Buss Table 1.1 • The Hominidae family of primates whose members are known as hominids, including humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans i.e. “the great apes”. • Homininae is a subfamily of Hominidaewhose members are known asHominins : includes Ardipithicus, Australopithecines, Paranthopus groupings and the genus homo (humans and close extinct human relatives) • Originally considered to have good upright walking • Although Ardipithecus ramidus was an early example of bipedalism and also had good climbing capabilities • Homo (genus) is the genus that includes modern humans and their close extinct relatives. • Hominins family tree and timeline • PBS Origins of Humankind • Location of Hominin fossils in Africa

  4. How many Hominin Species? • Shattered Ancestry: Evolution of Bipedalism • 4.4-million-year-old skeleton of Ardipithecus ramidus • has characteristics of hominins and early apes (hominids) • not as much like a chimpanzee • some characteristics of arboreal and bipedal locomotion • Burtele animal foot partial bipedalism 3.4 million years ago • Australopithecus afarensis Lucy was bipedal had long arms and apelike shoulders 3.6 million to 2.9 million years ago • Bushy evolutionary tree • Several human ancestors in the same time period • Homo genus: H. erectus, H. neanderthalensis and H. sapiens overlapped in time and space

  5. Homo Neanderthalensis • Lived in Europe and Southwestern Asia • 138,000 to 28,000 years ago • Mostly an Ice Age • Never numbered more than 100,000 • 1st Neanderthal skulls discovered in 1856, Neander Valley, Germany • Homo sapiens did not evolve from Neanderthals • 465,000 – 600,000 years ago H. Antecessor and H. Heidelbergensis were common ancestor • some evidence of interbreeding between H. Neanderthal and H. Sapiens • See "Shattered Ancestry: " p.46-47

  6. Changes in Anatomy • Bipedalism • Requires anatomical adaptations for walking upright • Including pelvis, leg bones, foot bones, position of skull • Requires neurological adaptations for walking behavior • Role of environmental change "The Savanna Hypothesis" • Fossil evidence for evolution of bipedalism • Ardipithecus ramidus (4.4 MYA) may have been bipedal • Australopithecus anamensis (4.2 MYA) probably was bipedal • Australopithecus afarensis (3.6 MYA) was bipedal, "Lucy" example • New Bone Suggests Lucy Walked Like Us • Larynx- Voice Box • houses the vocal cords which increased range of sounds making speech possible

  7. Changes in Anatomy • Jaws and Teeth • Teeth can be used as a weapon and for biting and chewing food • Shape and size of jaws and teeth "dentition" indicates type of food eaten • Early apes had large complex molars for grinding up vegetation and large canines as weapons • Ardipithecus ramidus 4.4-MYA had reduced canines • Australopithecus afarensis (3.6 MYA) with robust jaws and large molars • H. ergaster (1.9 - 1.8 MYA) has smaller teeth • eating small or soft food • collecting food "foraging" was assisted by use of tools

  8. Changes in Anatomy • Hands- Opposable Thumb • Ardipithecus ramidus 4.4-MYA fingers were relatively long and curved • adapted for climbing trees • Australopithecus afarensis (2 - 3 MYA) • have a human-like pattern in the metacarpals consistent with forceful opposition of the thumb and fingers typically adopted during tool use. • See: Human-like hand use in Australopithecus africanus • Via a series of intermediate stages human thumb became fully opposable • Homo habilis (2.5 - 1.5 MYA) • Homo erectus (1.8 - 0.04 MYA) • Homo Sapien "modern" (0.20 - present MYA) • Useful for using tools to smash open bones • Useful for making tools by producing flint flakes

  9. Changes in Anatomy • Shape and size of the skull correlates with brain size • Skull and brain size changes with hominin evolution • A. afarensis 400 cc • Homo habilis 750 cc • early Homo erectus 900 cc • later Homo erectus 1100-1200 cc • early Homo sapiens 1200 cc • Neanderthal 1500 cc • Modern Humans 1400 cc • Change in size over time appears to be gradual however it is more like a ratchet i.e. stair step • Human cognitive ability is not just because of brain size • Primates in general and humans in particular have a large brain compared to body size • Primates also have more neurons per brain size • Some areas of the brain increase in size more then others • neocortex in primates • frontal and temporal cortex areas in humans • Specialized brain circuits for face recognition, language and subjective sense of self

  10. Changes in Anatomy • Combination of changes in specific anatomy are interconnected • Bipedalism, Small Teeth and Large Brains Timeline • a gradual change in the overall anatomy of the hominin • requisite change in behavior, cognition and brain circuits • How would behavior and cognition change with regard to these anatomical changes? • How is the concept of psychological adaptations related to these changes?

  11. Migration • What is Migration? • movement of individuals • movement of genotypes • movement of a gene pool (gene flow) • movement of culture • Out of Africa: • H. erectus • Dmanisi Georgia site 1.77 MYA • China and Java (1.66 - 1.77 MYA) • H. antecessor (0.8 MYA) in Spain • H. heidelbergensis (0.6 MYA) in Europe • H. neanderthalensis descended from Homo heidelbergensis in Europe • H. sapiens in Europe and Asia • exodus from Africa beginning around 80,000 to 100,000 years ago • Migration Animation click on human origins then migration

  12. Role of Migration in Human Evolution • Human Skin on the Move • The earliest members of Homo sapiens, or modern humans, evolved in Africa between 120,000 and 100,000 years ago • they had darkly pigmented skin adapted to the conditions of UV radiation that existed near the equator • Dark skinned people living in the tropics generally receive sufficient UV radiation to make vitamin D • Outside the tropics where there is less UV radiation so migrants to northern latitudes would not make sufficient vitamin D • individuals with mutations for less skin pigmentation would have more vitamin D and still be protected from UV damage

  13. Role of Migration in Human Evolution • From Hirsute to Hairless • Hominins gradually evolved skin with less hair • Homo erectus and Homo sapiens were very active so overheating would be a problem • Chimpanzees’skin is light in color and is mostly covered by hair • The evolution of skin pigmentation is linked with that of hairlessness • Originally proposed that darker skins evolved to protect against skin cancer

  14. Role of Migration in Human Evolution • Built-in Sunscreen • skin contains cells called melanocytes that are capable of synthesizing the dark-brown pigment melanin in response to exposure to UV radiation • However, most skin cancers occur later in life after the first reproductive years • not enough evolutionary pressure for cancer protection alone to account for darker skin colors • The Folate Connection • Light-skinned people who had been exposed to strong sunlight had abnormally low levels of the essential B vitamin folate in their blood • Folate deficiency in pregnant women is related to an increased risk of neural tube defects such as spina bifida • Protection from birth defects would be a strong selection factor for darker skin

  15. Tools as part of Culture • Earliest examples of culture in Hominins • A. afarensis ~ 3.5 MYA primitive stone tools? • A. africanus ~ 3.0 MYA primitive stone tools? • H. habilis - 2.5 MYA primitive stone tools • Homo habilis 2.5 MYA at Olduvai Gorge selective in choosing particular rock materials • Oldowan tools core tools most likely functioned as multipurpose hammering, chopping, and digging implements • flake tools were used without further modification as knives • Homo erectus tool use • 1.7-1.6 MYA using advanced Oldowan • 1.5 MYA using Acheulian hand axe multipurpose implements used for light chopping of wood, digging up roots and bulbs, butchering animals, and cracking nuts and bones • Late transitional Homo erectus using softer hammers for greater control in the final shaping process • progressive improvement in tool making over time • reliance on tools increased as the implements became more useful • What psychological adaptations are needed for tool use and tool making?

  16. Tools as part of Culture • Homo sapiens, Homo heidelbergensis or Homo neanderthalensis • Mousterian tool tradition in area of "France" • specialized flake tools "Levallois" became more common • flake scraping, cutting, puncturing implements and spear points • Tool Invention • How does this differ from tool use? • Who came up with the idea for a new tool? • Why did a new invention spread across a population? • see Stone toolmaking and the evolution of human culture and cognition

  17. What role does culture play in the evolution of hominins? • How does the accumulation of culture change the selection pressures for Hominins? • New food getting techniques • australopithecines were primarily wild plant food collectors occasional scavengers of meat and eggs • Homo erectus used hunting, carcass scavenging and harvesting vast amounts of wild plant foods • expanding range of Homo erectus with migration out of Africa • evidence of cooking 780,000 and 400,000 years ago • Controlled use of fire 400,000 - 300,000 years ago • Biocultural Evolution: • use of culture for survival • "tools" becomes so common that culture becomes part of the environment • because the environment exerts selection pressure culture becomes part of the selection pressure

More Related