Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMarjorie Leona Hampton Modified over 9 years ago
2
2 Divisions of Primates 1. Anthropoid primates 2. Prosimean primates Characteristics: Nails (no claws) Prehensile hands and feet (grasping) Color vision and depth perception
3
Include: marmosets Monkeys Apes Humans Brain size Large relative to their body size Opposable thumbs Similar dental formula number and arrangement of teeth
4
BBipedalism – Ability to walk on 2 feet AAligned toes = Bipedalism EEnlarged brain =Vertical face AAreas for speech in the brain SS- shaped spine BBowl-shaped pelvis
5
Include: Lemurs Lorises Tarsiers
9
Draw a Prosimean skeleton, Anthropoid skeleton and a human skeleton Draw the basic bones Pay special attention to the skulls Use the same colors for homologous parts in the three skeletons Highlight the key features of each primate that makes them successful and unique How does this make them successful?
10
Scientists who study fossil evidence of human evolution Construct models of how and when different stages of human evolution occurred
11
Hominids include humans and extinct humanlike primates The oldest known hominid fossils are between 6 and 7 million years old First fossils found in Africa
12
Two hypotheses have been proposed for the evolution of Homo sapiens “African replacement” hypothesis Also called Out of Africa, Recent-African- Origin “Multiregional origin” hypothesis
13
Members of the genus Homo made repeated long-distance migrations out of Africa beginning 1.8 million years ago H. sapiens emerged from Africa about 150,000 years ago and spread across the Near East, Europe, and Asia The dispersing H. sapiens populations replaced all other hominids
15
H. erectus emerged from Africa 1.8 million years ago and spread across the Near East, Europe, and Asia Continued migrations and interbreeding occurred among widespread H. erectus populations Regional populations of H. erectus evolved into H. sapiens
17
Oldest known genus of hominids Lived more than 4 million years ago Knee joints- Allow bipedalism! Australopithecus anamensis Australopithecus afarensis – believed to have given rise to: A. africanus A. robustus A. boisei Modern Homo sapiens more than 1 million years ago
18
!!
19
!!
20
Fossils of nearly half complete early hominid Australopithecus afarensis suggests hominids became bipedal before their brains began to dramatically enlarge
21
Recent discovery Not clear whether it was bipedal 4.4 million years old
22
Hominid phylogenetic tree is very branchy in appearance Representing species died out, leaving no descendants.
23
Ancestors to modern humans Larger brains than australopithecines May have had speech Started to develop tools Homo erectus - potential first hominid to leave Africa Homo habilis Homo erectus
25
Now extinct Hypothesis- Homo sapiens, being superior to Neanderthal man, ran him off the planet. New hypothesis- more complicated Neanderthals may have mixed with the ancestor of modern man We could be carrying Neanderthal genes. Heavy bones Thick brow ridges Protruding teeth Used shelters, tools, and clothing
26
Cro-Magnons coexisted with Neanderthals in Europe and the Middle East for as many as 50,000 years Cro-Magnons had domed heads, smooth brows, and prominent chins 30,000-year-old Cro-Magnon artifacts include: Bone flutes Ivory sculptures Evidence of elaborate burial ceremonies
28
Evolved about 800,000 years ago A) Neanderthals Were early Homo sapiens They may be ancestral to modern humans OR They may have died out and been replaced by modern humans
29
1. some anthropologist think H. sapiens evolved in PARALLEL from populations of H. erectus all over the world. (interbreeding) 2. some anthropologists propose that H. sapiens DESCENDED from H. erectus in Africa and then dispersed across Earth.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.