Omo- oldest known AMH found at Omo site in Ethiopia date ~ 195,000ya. Same morphology as noted above.

Similar documents
The Pleistocene Epoch 1

Ch 11 Modern Homo sapiens

Chauvet Cave v=79luyqwznh4. Sunday, May 15, 2011

Anthro 101: Human Biological Evolution. Lecture 17 & 18: Homo sapiens. Prof. Kenneth Feldmeier

CHAPTER 11. The Origin and Dispersal of Modern Humans

Need: Scantron 882-E (big one) and note paper for short answer questions. Topics: End of chapter 8, chapter 9, chapters 10, a little of chapter 11

KEY. Chapter 2: The Stone Age and Early Cultures Section 1: The First People

THE ORIGIN AND SPREAD OF MODERN HUMANS 1. MODERN HUMANS

Marshall High School Mr. Cline Western Civilization I: Ancient Foundations Unit One BC. What is Civilization?

Evolutionary Microbiology. Chapter 12. Human Apex of All Life?

The Genus Homo Overview

World History: Patterns of Interaction

the scientific name for us as a species Homo sapiens

Outline. Early Modern Humans. Moderns invade Eurasia. Acheulean hand axe ( mya) Oldowan tools mya

Chapter 2 Section 1. Paleolithic Age

The Stone Ages and Early Cultures 5,000,000 years ago 5,000 years ago

PLANET OF THE APES. Can you imagine a world like this? Can you imagine a world like this?

The historical context

Historians, archeologists and anthropologists

World History: Patterns of Interaction

Chapter 1. The Peopling of the World, Prehistory 2500 B.C.

Chapter 2: Early Hominids

Prehistory Evolution of Man. AP World History Chapter 1a

Do Now. Take notes on the article on a separate sheet of paper

Early Humans Day 2. Enter Silently Begin Do Now Write HW in planner

PREHISTORY THE ORIGINS OF LIFE AND HUMANKIND

The First People. The Big Idea Prehistoric people learned to adapt to their environment, to make simple tools, to use fire, and to use language.

Archaeologists Archaeologists are a type of They too study the culture and societies of people, only they study people

Introduction to Biological Anthropology: Notes 25 Modern Homo sapiens Copyright Bruce Owen 2011 This semester I have not discussed the interesting

NAME: DATE: PER: Paleolithic People: The Paleolithic Age. Making A Connection

11/13/11$ Week 11. Neanderthals/Humans Early humans

Traditions and Encounters A Global Perspective on the Past

WHI.02: Early Humans

THE HUMAN LINEAGE: Features and bilingual activities.

Prehistory Overview & Study Guide

People of the Old Stone Age

The study of past societies through an analysis of what people have left behind.

Chapter 1 Notes 9/15/2015 HUMAN BEGINNINGS

UNIT 5: THE STONE AGE

Lecture 0. Prehistory before civilization

Who s Who on the Family Tree

Scientific Change. Course Director: Course website: SC/NATS York University Faculty of Science and Engineering Division of Natural Science

WHI.02: Early Humans

Prehistoric: the time before humans developed written languages to record their history

How Did We Get Here?

Today in Astronomy 106: apes to modern humans

Neanderthal or Neandertal?

PRIMITIVE ARCHITECTURE

Prehistoric Technology

The First People 5 million-5,000 years ago. Picture source: humanorigins.si.edu

Chapter 2 Early Hominids. What capabilities helped hominids survive?

World History I SOL WH1.2 Mr. Driskell

First Humans of Utah NOTES #1

Water, Life, Humans, and Civilization. The First Organisms. Two energy sources: photoautotrophs. The First Organisms

Early Hominids CHAPTER. 2.1 Introduction

Chapter 2. Early Hominids

Human Evolution. by Dana Visalli. Skull shapes & sizes: Chimpanzee, Australopithecus, Homo habilis, H. erectus, H. neanderthalensis, H.

Paleolithic Era to Mesopotamian City-States

Discovered: Oldest Writing in the New World

Stone Age & Archaeology. Unit Review

China Before it was China. September 10, 2013

Human Origins in Africa

Note Taking Study Guide UNDERSTANDING OUR PAST

Social Studies Homework: None. Social Studies Warm Up 8: -Write? And answer 1. What is prehistory? 2. What is life like for a nomad?

Chapter 2. Early Hominids. EQ: What capabilities helped hominids survive?

Danger Cave. Much of what we don t about Utah s prehistoric people

What Happened to the Neanderthals?

Human Origins Unit Test

Geography Boot Camp Quiz 1

Class:... School:.. Teacher:..

Early Humans. Before History

Temple Frieze from Iraq 2500 BCE. Outline. Evolution of Lactase Persistence. Domesticated Cattle. Prehistory of dairying

Early People. The American Indians Chapter 3

Graphic Organizer. Early people depended on Ice Age animals for food, clothing and shelter.

The Peopling of the World, Prehistory 2500 B.C.

Origins and Spread of Modern Humans

Early Man. Paleolithic and Neolithic Era

HUNTING AND GATHERING

AP World History-Exam #1

11/13/11$ The$First$Americans$ March$1,$2010$ The$world$right$about$now$ ICE$ More$ICE$

100,000 BEFORE R T H N O

Kevin Shillington History Of Africa

THE EVOLUTION OF HUMANITY AND CULTURE

+ Notes and Study Guide / Pre-Civilization and Simple Machines

TOOLS OF THE STONE AGE

Prehistoric humans were far smarter than previously assumed

The Great Human Migration Why humans left their African homeland 80,000 years ago to colonize the world

PISA Style Scientific Literacy Question

Georgia s Prehistoric Cultures

NAME DATE CLASS. Paleolithic Europe and the Near East. Willendorf GREECE. Crete Cyprus EGYPT

Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Human Society

166 Part Five: The Age of Humanity

EL SEGUNDO MIDDLE SCHOOL UNIT 1: EARLY HUMANS. Individuals and Societies Year 1

CONTENTS. HISTORY BOOK pages 2-5. TIME IMAGE POSTER pages 6-7. ACTIVITY CARDS pages 8-9. PAPER MANNEQUINS page 10. POP-UP ARCHITECTURE page 11-13

Period 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations

The Woolly Mammoth. Edward I. Maxwell

Pleistocene takeoff BCE) B.C.E.) Cro-Magnon enter e Europe Cave painting (32,000-30,00030,000 (circa 40,000 B.C.E.) Evolution of brain

1. Introduction enabled

Winmeen Tnpsc Group 1 & 2 Self Preparation Course History Part - 1 Pre Historic Period Notes

Section 2: Turning Point: The Neolithic Revolution

Transcription:

Test 3 Study Guide ANATOMICALLY MODERN HUMANS- earliest fossils found in Africa dated to about 200,000 years ago, well-rounded rear of skull (no occipital bun), high skull (doesn t slope), small brow ridges (supra orbital torus), noticeable chin, associated with Upper Paleolithic tools (some had blades and some were made of bone), created shelters and they were the first to create artistic objects (note cave drawings possible sympathetic magic-related to the desire to capture more animals). Omo- oldest known AMH found at Omo site in Ethiopia date ~ 195,000ya. Same morphology as noted above. homo heidelbergensis- a species of archaic human w/ a brain size close to that of modern humans (~1500-1800cc s or more) but had a larger face and lived in Africa, Europe and Asia between 800,000 and 200,000 ya. Cro-Magnon Man- found in Cro-Magnon, France dates between 27,000-23,000ya, earliest AMH populations found in Europe, very sophisticated, fished, cured ailments, made clothing and jewelry, built rafts etc complication: Homo Floresiensis hobbit Discovered in Liang Bua cave on the island of Flores in Indonesia, 3.5, 417cc s found w/ tools and bones, dates between 12,000 and 94,000 ya, possible dwarf species, AMH characteristics. Possible explanations= island dwarfism, microcephalic, pathology, different species= unsure of where it falls on our phylogenic tree PREHISTORIC ART (note Lascaux cave, France) >600 pictures of animals, mostly horses don t know purpose possible sympathetic magic cultural symbolism? means of communication ideas? pictograph- painting on surface like a cave wall petroglyph- design carved into rock or other surface

HUMAN ORIGINS Associated models: (from book as per your syllabus) multiregional model- evolution happened 1.8 mya in Africa from a single lineage but that changes in modern human anatomy happened by way of gene flow as archaic humans moved across the Old World. assimilation model- initial change to modern humans took place in Africa and was spread to other populations by way of gene flow. The genes of non-african populations were assimilated into the gene pool instead of replaced. It stresses anagenesis. African origin model- modern human anatomy occurred first in Africa and then spread across the Old World. Recent fossil evidence supports this theory. African replacement model- modern humans evolved as a new species (cladogenesis) in Africa about 200,000 years then spread throughout the Old World replacing preexisting human populations. Africa s great genetic diversity (more than Asia or Europe) has also been used to support this model working under the assumption that the oldest populations will accumulate the most mutations over time. {some people disagree w/ that assumption noting population size as a possible reason for the high degree of genetic diversity} regional continuity- refers to the appearance of similar traits w/in the same geographic region over time this evidence is strongest in East Asia and Australasia. genetic evidence: mitochondrial DNA shows 2 clusters for the human species- 1) people with African ancestry 2) people with African and non-african ancestry. B/c both clusters have people w/ African ancestry, the most recent common female ancestor would be from Africa. Mitochondrial DNA puts this date to about 200,000 years which = the initial appearance of anatomically modern humans in the fossil record. Australopithecus (A.), out of Africa (South & East mostly), kept ape-like features{teeth in parallel rows w/ large canines and small brain size (cranial capacity 400-500cc)}, bipedal but climbed occasionally, in woodlands and savanna type area, body mass < 100 lbs, fruit eaters= thin enamel, 3.5-5 ft tall TOOLS --know spcifics of all tool traditions we discussed 5 1) Azilian (11.5-9kya) 2) Solutrean (20-17kya) 3) Magdalenian (17-11.5kya) 4)Aurignacian (40-28kya) 5) Gravettian (29-19kya) ~upper paleolithic- a general term used to refer to the stone tool tradition of anatomically modern humans ~ middle paleolithic- a general term used to refer to the stone tool tradition of homo heidelbergensis and neandertals ~ lower paleolithc- a general tern used to refer to the stone tool tradition of homo habilis, erectus and rudolfensis

Insectivore- mammals adapted to eating insects; they were arboreal, and nocturnal Eurasia- combined land masses of Europe and Asia post orbital bar- bony ring that separates they eye orbit from the back of the skull in primates postcranial- part of skeleton below the skull also note mosaic evolution phylogeny- refers to the evolutionary origins and relationships of species including how closely they are related to each other and to ancestral species chronology- refers to the sequential order in which past events occur note arboreal adaptations and the availability of an econiche