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This is Jeopardy Human Evolution To make this game…

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Presentation on theme: "This is Jeopardy Human Evolution To make this game…"— Presentation transcript:

1 This is Jeopardy Human Evolution To make this game…
First think of five review categories and five questions for each category. Add the categories to the top of the table in slide 2. Place your questions according to the categories into the slides. For example…C1-200 is the question for Category 1 worth 200 points. C5-400 is the question for Category 5 worth 400 points. Place a final jeopardy question in the Final Jeopardy box. Test your slide show. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at or

2 Category No. 1 Category No. 2 Category No. 3 Category No. 4 No. 5 100
200 300 400 500 To play the game. Divide you class into teams. If you have bells or some other way of emulating ringing in your answers, knock yourself out! The contestant chooses a category and a point value. Click on their choice and you will advance to the associated slide. Click on the slide to reveal the answer. Once the contestant has stated the question click on the slide again to reveal the question. Click BACK to return to the Categories Slide. The first contestant from team 1 goes first then I alternate to the next team.

3 C1-100-The answer is… What are two characteristics are common to all primates? Binocular vision and movable fingers and toes Back

4 C1-200-The answer is… Why was the discovery of Lucy so important?
She was the missing link Back

5 C1-300-The answer is… Name one prosimian primates (earliest primates)
Lemurs, lorises, tarsiers Back

6 C1-400-The answer is… What one thing do scientists look at on a fossil to determine whether it is a hominid? If the bones indicate bipedalism Back

7 C1-500-The answer is… Why was using tools a huge advancement for humankind? Work with outside world Back

8 C2-100-The answer is… The earliest evidence of modern Homo sapiens came from sites in Africa Back

9 C2-200-The answer is… Were all australopithecines (lucy and family) bipedal? yes Back

10 C2-300-The answer is… Do modern humans belong to the same genus as the australopithecines? No – modern humans belong to the genus homo Back

11 C2-400-The answer is… Where did the first human evolve? Africa Back

12 C2-500-The answer is… Why were the finger drawings in the caves in Australia significant? They demonstrated the ability to think abstractly Back

13 C3-100-The answer is… The oldest hominid fossils dated to 4.5 million years ago are known as? Ardipithecus Ramidus Back

14 C3-200-The answer is… What was Homo erectus known for? Standing Back

15 C3-300-The answer is… What does Prehensile (think thumb) mean?
The ability to grasp Back

16 C3-400-The answer is… What is unique about human skulls and brains?
Largest brain to body ratio Back

17 C3-500-The answer is… What information can you get from fossilized skull fragments? Age, race, gender, height, evolution link Back

18 C4-100-The answer is… What information can you get from fossilized teeth (think about large teeth and jaw on some monkeys)? Diet, wear patterns can tell you about other activity (animal skins), what the environment was like from their diet Back

19 C4-200-The answer is… What are three characteristics unique to anthropoid primates? Well developed collar bones Rotating shoulder joints Opposable thumb Similar dental formula Large brain to body size Back

20 C4-300-The answer is… Name anatomical features that support bipedalism. Cup shaped pelvis S-shaped spine Foramen magnum at bottom of skull Short aligned toes Stiff knee below body Back

21 C4-400-The answer is… What are the advantages of being a biped?
Use of hands for carrying children and food, for protection, for feeding, for play or gesture Less heat loss Able to travel farther – more efficient locomotion Back

22 C4-500-The answer is… How did bipedalism increase fitness (ability to survive)? Able to eat more efficiently with hands Better able to take care of/protect young Able to see farther for food or predators Back

23 C5-100-The answer is… Summarize the multiregional hypothesis (how did races evolve? Or different human features). Modern humans evolved in parallel worldwide from Homo erectus – must have gene flow between populations Back

24 C5-200-The answer is… Explain the African origin hypothesis
Modern humans originated in Africa 100,000 – 200,000 years ago and then migrated into the rest of the world. Back

25 C5-300-The answer is… When it comes to hominids, what is the relationship between body size and brain size? Direct proportion – bigger body = bigger brain Back

26 C5-400-The answer is… Compare the skull of a human with that of a gorilla. Gorilla: brow ridge, prognathic face, foramen magnum at back of skull, sagittal crest, u-shaped jaw Human: small face, no brow ridge, flat face under skull, V-shaped jaw, foramen magnum at bottom, no sagittal crest *Both have similar dental formula Back

27 C6-500-The answer is… How were Neanderthals different from Homo Sapiens? Neanderthals had heavy bones, thick brow ridges, large protruding teeth, shorter but very heavily built Back


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