ANTH 1000 Test 2 (Dr. Berk)
Mode of production
"A set of social relations through which labor is deployed to wrest energy from nature by means of tools, skills, organization, and knowledge"
Free markets
"free" because no traditional restrictions determine distribution (not linked to social status)`
the market via supply and demand
determines levels of production & consumption
balanced reciprocity
exchange with anticipation of equal return
generalized reciprocity
exchange with no expectation of immediate return
Agriculture
more food being grown and more labor-intensive when compared to slash and burn in horticulture
Negative
not close at all and very selfish
Means of production
other examples are mines, machines, factories, new technologies, human labor itself
Agriculture
permanent plots and fields that are cultivated continuously, larger populations supported by permanent food source
Terracing
takes rolling hills or steep sides and makes it flat and creates tiers and reduces runoff and erosion and more efficient use of water
negative reciprocity
the attempt to get something for nothing
Agriculture
these societies have increased inequality; food producers eventually become peasants in the society
Kula ring
value of these objects are not in currency; value is connected to the participants in this exchange; system based on trust and obligation and shame bc if the holder gets selfish and doesn't want to pass it on then they are shamed and status will be weakened; differentiated from bartering; they are priceless and value is in the exchange
Commodity fetish
we don't think of the human labor that goes into the production of the products we buy every day and we view the end product and not what goes into creating the product
Free market
when the market operates smoothest free of government intervention
agriculture
you have plows and terracing and animal labor and animal manure for fertilizer
Australopiths
-Ape-like from the top down -Human-like from the ground up
Genus Ardipithecus
-Bipedal, but apelike in size, anatomy, and habitat -Earliest hominin? Not definitive
Genus Paranthropus (Robust Australopiths)
-Large post-canine teeth -Smaller incisors and canines -Flatter faces -Large chewing muscles
Nose shape
The shape of what feature differs between New World monkeys and Old World monkeys?
Homologies
The similarities used to assign organisms to the same taxon are called what?
Immature birth
The skulls of newborns are not fully formed, are actually elastic, and continue to grow outside the womb
Economics
The study of such systems
Stone tools
The use of __________ __________ aided many species in their competition with other ones
Horticulture (slash-and-burn)
Then people grow on these plots of land for a few seasons to let the original land lay fallow and regenerate its nutrients
Catarrhines
Old World Monkeys and Apes?
Divine creation
Theories of evolution attempt to make sense of human origins, just as accounts of ___________ _____________ do
Behavioral modernity
There are debates over when AMH's achieved what?
Expansion and domestication
These changes were mostly related to population size
Bridewealth and dowry
These gifts create debt and durable alliances between descent groups
States; firms
These labor forces are controlled by ___________ and employed by ___________
Cosmologies
These texts place humans in an original "state of nature" that is preferable in many ways to the kinds of societies we live in now
Vertebrates
They are distinguished from previous life forms which were gelatinous masses basically
Oldowan pebble tools
They enabled some species to expand their diets and become omnivorous
Oldowan pebble tools
They get more refined and specialized over time
Primates
They will have kinship relations, they do not classify others as kins like we do
Primates
They will share food widely and routinely but not as widely and routinely as humans
Adaptations
This class focuses on how human ___________________ became increasingly complex and unstable after about 35,000 BP
Rift Valley
This geography indicates the separation of chimp and gorilla ancestors from Homo ancestors
Better tools (Acheulian)
This led to an increased reliance on hunting and animal protein for Homo erectus
Potlaching
Through the lens of classical economic theory, in which the profit motive is viewed as a human universal, ______________________ is irrational and wasteful
Foraging
Today, fewer than 30,000 people make their living by ___________________, and this number is constantly decreasing
Broad Spectrum Revolution
Took place from 15,000 BP to 12,000 BP
Homo neanderthalensis
Tools (Mousterian) improved on the Acheulian variety
Diets (the more adaptable you are, the less likely you are to become extinct)
Tools lead to new ________ so more adaptable so less likely to become extinct
Denisovans (because it had flaring sides)
Tooth unlike either Neantertal or AMH teeth
Denisovans
Tooth was NOT similar to teeth of Neanderthals and AMH bc it has flaring sides
Creationist cosmology
Traits are fixed and unchanged since creation and Linnaeus grouped things by similarity
Convergent evolution
Traits related through environmental pressures
Analogy
Traits that are result of evolution and not a common ancestor
Analogies; convergent evolution
Traits that dolphins and fish share are _______________ that evolved through _______________ __________________
Profit maximization
Trying to get what we want for less
Hominin
Uniquely human evolutionary lineage
Making a living and foraging for food
Until 10,000 years ago, there was no difference between these two things
Great Rift Valley
Up to this point, all hominin evolution took place in Africa mainly in East Africa in ________ ______ _________ in the savannah grasslands
Blade tools with Homo sapiens sapiens
Upper Paleolithic tools?
Molars
Use _______________ to chew so if you chew you will have bigger _________________
Taxation
Used to accumulate resources used to support a growing number of specialties including human labor and militaries
Orangutans
Very arboreal and very solitary so they are the exception that proves the rule
Gorillas
Very hierarchical in their groups
Polyandry
Very rare, almost exclusively in South Asia (Tibet, Nepal, India, Sri Lanka)
Inconclusive evidence
Was "Toumai" a hominin?
Domestication
Was emerging around 10,000 years ago
Tool use
Was more refined and advanced with bigger brain individuals
Domestication
Was more specialized and focused on a smaller number of food sources compared to broad spectrum foraging
Domestication
Was the gradual result of attempts to recreate the Hilly Flanks economy in new climates
Mode of production
Ways of organizing production
Amongst royals; hemophilia
We can see higher levels of genetic maladies in what group of people? What specific malady?
Cultures
We define our kin differently across _______________
Hogopan
We don't know what species specifically ____________________ is (between 6-8 million years ago)
Reliance on sight over smell
We have binocular vision and can see color and depth; good eyesight
Reliance on hand over nose
We have pads on our fingertips and toe tips that we rely on for sensory data
Spines
We have straighter ___________ than chimps
Social stratification
Wealth concentrated in the upper tiers so sharp social divisions based on unequal access of resources - what is this known as?
Ardi
Weighed about 120 pounds, and close to 4 feet tall
Denisovans
Went East instead of West, so went to Siberia which is where Asian descendants get Neanderthal DNA perhaps
Strepsirrhines
Were flourishing by 54 million years ago
1. Inbreeding avoidance 2. Familiarity breeds contempt 3. Prevention of domestic chaos 4. Marry out or die out
What are the four theories that explain why there is a taboo against incest?
Adaptive strategies
What are the methods for meeting the needs of subsistence and making a living?
Surplus takers, production organizers, and food producers
What are the three social classes in the State?
Slavery
What comes into existence after state formation?
Tails
What do the New World monkeys all have?
1. Share food widely and routinely 2. Cooperate in planning and carrying out complex, multistage tasks 3. Use spoken language 4. Classify others as kin of various types and interact with them for life
What do we imagine as distinctly human?
Body size and brain size
What increased together over time in hominin evolution?
Caste System in India
What is an example of endogamy?
Site indicates (based on remains) a very diverse diet including deer and elephant and fish just to name a few; evidence of controlled fire and huts so this may have been a permanent site. Hearths and fire places and controlled fire over long periods of time; fire is about 1 million years old but no campfires at that site so this was the first place
What is important about Terra Amata, 300,00 year old campsite in France?
Bipedalism (walking on two legs which is a major advancement in evolution), upright and running locomotion, holding a stone which could have been used as a weapon or tool perhaps
What is important to note in the photo of Australopithecus?
Seeds
What is larger in domesticated plants as compared to their wild equivalents?
Flat noses
What is the nasal morphology of Platyrrhines (aka New World monkeys)?
Individuals
What motivates people in different societies to produce, distribute, or exchange, and consume? Here the focus is not on systems of behavior but on the _____________________ who participate in those systems
Had large molars and zygomatic arches and sagittal crests - so this indicates a gritty, fibrous, chewing-intensive diet
What was the dentition and cranial morphology of Australopiths like?
Cutting
What were flakes used for?
Catarrhines
When they do have tails they cannot grasp stuff with them; terrestrial and live on the ground so stronger and more muscular which is an adaptation to terrestrial predators, found in Africa and Asia, greater degree of sexual dimorphism which is anatomical and often temperamental differences between males and females of a given species, males tend to be bigger than females, males are more fierce and aggressive
South Asia
Where are lorises found?
Hilly Flanks
Where did food production begin?
East Africa
Where did hominin evolution occur?
State
A form of social and political organization that has a formal, central government and a division of society into social classes
Economy
A system of production, distribution, and consumption of resources
Homo habilis
Where tool use was thought to have originated but new discoveries have shown that the Australopithecus had tool use
Strepsirrhines are solitary Haplorrhines are gregarious
Which are solitary and which are gregarious: Strepsirrhines vs. Haplorrhines?
Australopiths
While physically smaller than later species, they had relatively robust features
Less varied and less nutritious diets when compared to foraging diets; less protein and instead more fats/carbs
Why did domestication lead to declines in public health?
1. It provides a standard to assess human uniqueness 2. We are closely related and share an evolutionary history 3. It helps us make sense of behaviors that are thought to be distinctly human
Why do we study non-human primates?
The brains got bigger in bits then a sudden spike with this species in terms of brain size; it is punctuated equilibrium which is rapid change after periods of relatively small change
Why the rapid pace of evolution between Homo habilis and Homo erectus?
Levirate
Widow marries one of her deceased husbandʼs brothers
Sororate
Widower marries one of his deceased wifeʼs sisters (or another woman from her group if a sister is not available)
Hard husk = protection from animals and less likely to be eaten by animals
Wild wheat has a _______________ husk for what reason?
Brittle axis = support the next generation and break more easily so it can get into ground to make more for next generation
Wild wheat has a ________________ axis for what reason?
Surplus
With the emergence of the State, new social classes emerged that depended on ____________________ production to live
Tool
________ users displaced other hominins, pushing them into drier, less diverse zones, and some ultimately to extinction
Apes and monkeys
___________ and ______________ are not the same and not interchangeable.
Chimps
___________ eat fruit in forest and woodlands, sometimes each other
Uruk
___________, the capital city of Sumer, had a population of about 50,000 people by 4,800 BP
Choppers
_____________ for pounding, breaking, or bashing
Gorillas
_____________ went to forest and eat green vegetation
Hominins
______________ evolved in open savannah grassland and ate gritty and dry and chewing intensive diets; gritty fibers
Food production
_______________ ________________ began in Hilly Flanks where wheat and barley grew in abundance and didn't require too much work from its inhabitants
Surplus takers; food producers
_______________ _________________ have most power but smallest group whereas _________________ ________________ are biggest group but have least amount of power
Sheep and goats
_______________ and ____________ were bred to be smaller, more docile, and to be more efficient producers of wool, hair, milk, fat, and meat
Hominin
________________ is a sub-category in hominid
Hunting and gathering
_________________ and _________________ were the primary subsistence practices for most of human history
Evolution
_________________ is not a clear transformation from one species to the next; there is competition and some are dead-ends and become extinct while some evolve
Strepsirrhine
__________________ nostrils tend to be surrounded by moist, naked skin
Domesticated
_____________________ animals are bred to be smaller and more docile and more efficient at production of hair and milk and fat and meat
Haplorrhine
_____________________ nostrils tend to be surrounded by dry, hairy skin
Fraternal polyandry
______________________ ___________________ is an effective strategy when resources are scarce (e.g. Tibet, Goldstein)
Domestication
__________________________ has produced huge social differences
Industrial Revolution
Before the _________________ _________________ (18th century), the vast majority of the world's population lived in economies based on four "adaptive strategies," all but one of which developed in the last 10,000 years
Neolithic Revolution
Began in the Middle East 10,000 years ago and then spread throughout the Old World
Homo erectus
Beginning with ______________, culture becomes a major selective factor and it is tied to larger brain and increased cranial capacity
Slash and burn
Benefits of burning the field is release of nutrients in the soil and clear the underbrush and kill parasites and bugs in the soil as well
Water (irrigation)
Between 6,000 and 7,000 BP, people learned how to bring _______________ into areas that did not have enough for agriculture
Zygomatic arches
Bigger cheeks to accommodate bigger chewing muscles
Genus Ardipithecus
Bipedal and feet were not has flat as later species, so didn't walk as far and lived in trees a lot
Australopiths
Birth canals are more narrow compared to humans
Bipedality
Birth canals can only get so big without compromising what?
"Toumai" (Sahelanthropus tchadensis)
Blends apelike and human characteristics; lived in mixed environment; anterior foramen magnum (bipedalism?)
Homo habilis and Homo erectus
Both evolved independently from each other with shared Austrolapith ancestors
Homo habilis
Brain size of about 650-800, had long arms and small bodies, used Oldowan pebble tools
Natufians
Built permanent villages in the Hilly Flanks
Middle East
By 10,000 BP, people in the ________________ ___________ were subsisting on domesticated crops and animals and living in permanent settlements
Broad spectrum economies
By 7,000 BP, people were abandoning ______________ ______________ ______________ in favor of economies based on a small number of domesticated sources of food
irrational
By extension, non-capitalist societies are falsely seen as what
Hilly Flanks
Can be conceptualized as Garden of Eden in the sense that this region had wild grains and wild game where human inhabitants could partake in this food option with minimal work to obtain it
Karl Marx
Capitalism?
Polygyny
___________________________ is more prevalent when there is a gender disparity within a given society
Old World monkeys
Catarrhines?
Bipedal locomotion
Changes in femur and thigh bones and hips to allow for this
-Larger bodies - lot bigger compared to monkeys and others -Live longer -Longer birth intervals and time in between reproduction, longer periods of infant dependency -Tendency of upright locomotion and posture when compared to monkeys -Larger brains which is connected to infant dependency -Shorter faces -No tails whatsoever
Characteristics of apes?
-Tend to have dry, naked skin around their nose -Tend to be diurnal, which means active during the day so they see better during the day and not at night -Tend to be gregarious or more social and groom each other which is a highly social activity
Characteristics of haplorrhines?
Apes (not monkeys and apes)
Chimps are ___________
The neanderthals
Clothes from animal hides and leather
Homo habilis
Coexisted with P. boisei (hyperrobust Australopithecine) for roughly half a million years
Homo neanderthalensis
Cold-adapted European hominin
Vertical economy
Consisting of four geographically close, but very different, environmental zones
Fire
Controlled _______ enabled Homo erectus to spread into temperate climates and ultimately leave Africa
1. More Complex Tools 2. Permanent Plots and Fields 3. Sedentary Lifestyle; Higher Population Density 4. Increased Specialization 5. Higher Productivity 6. Individual Ownership
Correlations and features of agriculture:
1. Depends of naturally available food 2. Small populations 3. Mobile and flexible 4. Relatively egalitarian 5. Gendered division of labor
Correlations and features of foraging:
1. Swiddens (burned clearings made for temporary agriculture); Slash and Burn 2. Hand-held tools such as hoes and digging tools 3. Low yields 4. Inequalities appear
Correlations and features of horticulture:
Polyandry
Cultural adaptation to mobility associated with customary male travel for trade, commerce, and military operations
Homo erectus
Culture became something of an acquired characteristic, passed down directly and indirectly to one's offspring such as how to make tools
European and Asian
DNA shows that ___________ and __________ descent have 1-4% neanderthal DNA
Neanderthal
DNA suggests that ____________________ ancestors split from Archaic Homo sapiens about 600,000 years ago
Bipedalism
Developed for tool use and to carry tools
1-4% of the Neanderthal genome incorporated within the DNA of living Europeans and Asians (but not Africans)
Did Neanderthals evolve into Homo sapiens sapiens or did they die out/were they outcompeted and went extinct?
No, this is a false assumption as if they were around as chimps 6-8 million years ago (as they were not), but we do share common ancestry w/ the African primates including chimps and apes
Did humans evolve from chimps?
No
Did we evolve from monkeys?
Smallpox (along with other diseases and epidemics)
Didn't exist until we started domesticating animals
-Not perfect: groups may possess some correlated features but not all -Not an evolutionary schema -Not mutually exclusive
Disclaimers about Cohen's typology?
Foraging
Does not encourage social stratification and the groups tend to be more equal
Hard axis = not going to break off when you are harvesting and moving them to storage
Domesticated wheat has a _________________ axis for what reason?
Brittle husk = easier for humans to eat and easier to access the seeds
Domesticated wheat has a _________________ husk for what reason?
Public health
Domestication involves more highly specialized diets because less food sources and options which leads to a decline in _______________ ________________
Foraging
Domestication was more specialized and focused on a smaller number of food sources compared to broad spectrum ____________________
Formalists
applied neoclassical economics to non-Western societies and portrayed them as "closet capitalists"
Animal butchering
Oldowan tools were used for tasks like what?
Homo floresiensis
On Flores near Indonesia?
Carrying capacity
Once they reached ___________________ _______________, the population spilled out into new ecological niches and marginal zones
Polygyny
One man, several wives
Mesopotamia
One of the first states?
Polyandry
One woman, several husbands
Lemurs
Only found in the wild in Madagascar
Rift Valley
Open grassland/ savannah ecologies
6
Our earliest ancestors have been around for __ million years and this is small relative to the history of the planet (3 minutes of the 24 hour day
Toumai
Outlier in terms of where is was found in Africa (Chad is in central Africa but hominin evolution occurred in East Africa)
Industrial
Outside __________________ societies, marriage is often more a relationship between groups than one between individuals
Surpluses
Patterns of more organization and bureaucratic ways were seen as a result of what?
Bipedalism
Pelvis, spine, and lumbar curve has to do with what?
In-laws
People don't just take a spouse; they assume obligations to a group of what?
Horticulture
Permanent food sources but smaller scale in terms of production, intensity, and labor when compared to foraging
Hilly Flanks
Place known as _____________ ____________ is the Garden of Eden in this new and improved cosmology
New World monkeys
Platyrrhines?
Molars
Early species have bigger ______________ to chew and eat gritty diet
Rift Valley
East Africa's ______ ______________ where the majority of early hominin evolution occurred
Vertical
Fertile Crescent is a ______________ economy
Terra Amata (in France)
Fire is about 1 million years old but no campfires at that site so this was the first place
Homo erectus
First species to leave Africa due to bigger brains and controlled use of fire
Vertical economy
Goes from highest to lowest
Catarrhines (Old World Monkeys)
Greater degree of sexual dimorphism which is anatomical and often temperamental differences between males and females of a given species
Orangutans
Habitat is being destroyed for palm oil from the trees
Homo erectus
Had larger brains and better tools (Acheulian)
Genus Paranthropus
Had massive chewing muscles so bigger canines and smaller canines/incisors; cheeks flare out to accommodate these chewing muscles
Diurnal
Haplorrhines tend to be ______________
Monkeys, apes, and tarsals
Haplorrhines?
Husk
Hard shell that protects the seed?
Natufians
Harvested 2000 pounds in 3 weeks so they had a surplus so they created storehouses -- so had permanent settlements to stay close to their surplus
Australopiths
Has 2 genera
Food production
Has existed for less than 1 percent of the time Homo has spent on Earth, yet has produced huge social differences
"Marry out or die out"
Has nothing to do with genetics or maladies; basically you just need to marry out and form coalitions in order to survive over time
Platyrrhines (New World Monkeys)
Have a prehensile tail and arboreal?
Primates
Have evolved and radiated over the last 65 million years
Mammals
Have hair and mammary glands
Haplorrhines
Have subsequently branched further into monkeys and apes
Vertebrates
Have vertebrae and backbones and spines
Incest
Having a taboo (broadly speaking) is a universa,l but in the specifics, it gets foggy based on who is considered your kin and who is not - what is this referring to?
Incest
Having a taboo against _____________ is a human universal
Polygamy
Having more than one spouse
Fire
Helped Homo Erectus move out of Africa
Tapetum (also found in alligators and deer)
Helps them see at night so essentially night vision
Karl Marx
His ideas come about when the emergence of the industrial revolution
- Gorillas went to forest and eat green vegetation -Chimps eat fruit in forest and woodlands, sometimes each other -Hominins evolved in open savannah grassland and ate gritty and dry and chewing intensive diets, gritty fibers
Hogopan split into different evolutionary lines in different ecological niches and their diets became specialized. Who went where and who ate what?
Broader
Hominid is the ____________ category
Group (or groups in competition with other groups)
Homo erectus saw a transition to __________ selection or inclusive fitness
2
Homo habilis appears about how many million years ago?
2
Homo habilis came to the scene about ___ million years ago
Call systems
Primates do not use spoken language, but use __________ ________________ and can manipulate symbols
Grasping ability
Primates have 5 digits on their hands and feet plus an opposable thumb to hold and grasp things; they also have opposable toes which was due to arboreal lifestyle but we do not have opposable big toes; we also have nails and not claws
Brain complexity
Primates have larger brains compared to other mammals; amongst smartest of all living things
Industrialism
Produces large, mobile, skilled, specialized, and (differently) educated labor forces
Punctuated equilibrium
Rapid change after periods of relatively small change
Marriage
Refers to the customs, rules, and obligations that establish a special relationship between sexually co-habitating adults, typically (but not exclusively) male and female, between them and any children they produce (together or singly), and between the kin of the spouses
Pastrolism
Rely on herd animals and are nomadic with herd animals; milk heavy diets; travel seasonally with their herd
Behavioral modernity
Relying on symbolic thought, elaborating cultural creativity, and as a result becoming fully human in behavior as well as in anatomy
Systems
How are production, distribution, and consumption organized in different societies? This question focuses on __________________ of human behavior and their organization
-Tend to have moist, naked skin around their nostrils -Much smaller and brain to body size is smaller too -Tend to be solitary -Tend to be nocturnal and have a tapetum which helps them see at night and is essentially night vision
How are streppsirrhines different from haplorrhines?
Culturally specific
How cultures define their relatives, and thus incest, is variable and ________________ _______________
Immature birth means the brains grow outside the womb and overtime the skull hardens
How do you accommodate larger brains without compromising bipedality?
Negatively
How does the US view plural marriage?
Alluvial Plain
How to get water from rivers to _____________ ______________ to support even larger populations and have more surplus and live in towns
6
Human ancestors split off from chimp and gorilla ancestors about ___ million years ago
Domestication
Human are ancestral and forced into a life of _________________________ as a result of climate change
Australopiths
Human like from the ground-up (in terms of bipedality and bipedal locomotion)
Homo floresiensis
Human-like but with very small brains (400cc) perhaps a pygmy H. erectus?
Wheat; natural selection and human preferences
Humans selected traits in __________ and new phenotypes are favored as a result of ________________ _______________ and ________________ ________________
Foraging
Hunting and gathering with no domesticated plants and animals
Hogopan
Hypothetically existed between 8 and 6 million years ago
Nuer (example of same-sex unions)
If a man has only daughters and no sons, he can designate a daughter to be a "son" and she can take a wife and the wife can have relations with other men. Any children are the children of the designated "son" (daughter-son) and the wife
Balanced
If people fail to reciprocate then the bonds are weakened but if it is reciprocated then the bonds are strengthened
Endogamic - we need to marry people who fit into our "group" and who are similar to us
In the US, do we have exogamic or endogamic tendencies in regards to marriage?
Oldowan pebble tools
Represent the world's oldest formally recognized stone tools
Fraternal polyandry
Restricts number of wives and heirs, so land transmitted with minimal fragmentation
Convergent evolution
Just because you share traits does not mean you are related; it could be an analogy as a result of what?
The neanderthals
Large torso/short limb configuration
The neanderthals
Larger cranial capacity than modern humans (1430 cc)
The neanderthals
Last ancestry w/ this species lived 600,000 years ago
Streppsirrhines
Lemurs and lorises?
Homo erectus
Less gritty diet so changes in dentition and cranial morphology and reduced chewing muscles and cranial morphology; BUT had enlarged front teeth for ripping and tearing which shows animal protein in their diet; more refined brow ridge due to work done by front teeth and meat diet; strong upper bodies and strong jaws; skull is referred to as being football shaped
Homo erectus
Less robust cranial morphology and dentition, but very robust head and body
Labor
Links humans to the material world around us and is a fundamentally social activity
Orangutans
Live high up in trees so hard to study and live in forest
Gibbons
Live in parts of Asia and have long arms in relation to legs because they live in trees
Platyrrhines
Live in trees so have prehensile tails which means they can control it and grasp things, arboreal, more through tree with hand-over-hand motion, smaller and quicker and more agile which helps with arboreal lifestyle and helps them avoid predators, have flatter noses which is distinct from us
Homo habilis
Lived alongside P. boisei for half a million years
Homo erectus
Lived from 1.9 million years ago to 400,000 B.P.
Homo floresiensis
Lived in island environment; very small bodies and brains so more in line w/ chimp than other species; pygmy Homo Erectus that adapted to the environment
The neanderthals
Long noses (Thompsons Nose Rule) so more insulation from air; shorter limbs and large torsos to conserve body heat in colder climate
Domestication
Looking for food was how people made a living before what?
Primates
Lot of instruction amongst __________________ and showing the young how to do various tasks such as how to use tools
Acheulian stone tools with Homo erectus
Lower Paleolithic tools?
Australopiths
Lucy was one - still smaller
Foraging
Main distinctions that matter are gender and age and this will determine your place in the larger scale of things
Australopith
Mainly from East and South Africa, not Central like "Toumai"
Sociality
Mainly monkeys and apes while lemurs are more solitary; humans tend to live in groups because this helps spread long-term attentive care to offspring
Bipedalism
Major indicator of hominin species
Means of production
Major productive resources, such as land (territory), labor, technology
Gorillas
Males: 400 pounds and 6 feet tall but basically fully terrestrial and typically eat all green vegetation
Old World monkeys and apes (Catarrhines)
Many have tails, but not all do?
Phylogeny
Many similarities between organisms reflect their common _____________________ — their genetic relatedness based on common ancestry
1. Learning 2. Tool use 3. Hunting (many chimps hunt monkeys often in organized planned execution) 4. Symbolic communication
Many things that we may consider uniquely human exist amongst our primate cousins including:
Living together
Marriage (or at least being engaged) in the US is a prerequisite before doing what with your significant other?
Incest
Marriage is often conceptualized as a way of avoiding what?
Sex, procreation, gender, and kinship
Marriage, everywhere, involves the legitimation of what four things?
Arranged marriages - and Americans typically do not believe in arranged marriages
Marriages based on these factors are often (negatively) viewed as what?
Homogamy (such as marrying someone with the same religion or in the same economic class as you)
Marrying people who are similar to you
The neanderthals
Massive brow ridges and front teeth; brains are bigger than our species; larger mid-section and shorter limbs
Radiated
Means expanded and moved out to new locations
Mousterian tools with neanderthals
Middle Paleolithic tools?
Oldowan pebble tools since it aided in expanding diets
Might help explain robust features?
Homo erectus
Modern body and limbs and bigger brain size of 900 to 1250 cc
Surplus takers
Ruling elite maybe monarchies or priests
"Toumai" in Chad in 2001 - prob lived 6-7 million years ago
SAHELANTHROPUS TCHADENSIS - what is the other name and where was it discovered?
Catarrhines (Old World Monkeys and Apes)
More terrestrial and greater degrees of sexual dimorphism?
Chimpanzees
Most closely related non-human primate species
Ardi (4.4 million years ago)
Most complete early hominid (potentially hominin) specimen (110 different pieces of fossilized bone found)
Gibbons
Most distantly related apes but more related to them than any non-ape primate
"Making a Living"
Satisfaction of the most basic material survival needs (food, clothing, and shelter)
Disease
Sedentary populations are breeding grounds for ____________
Exogamy
Seeking a mate outside one's own group
Endogamy
Seeking a mate within one's own group
Orangutans
Sexual dimorphism is significant
Incest
Sexual relations with a close relative
Homology
Shared traits and characteristics inherited from a common ancestor? Shared traits that indicate a common ancestor?
Homo erectus
Shift from Darwinian to increasingly (spiritually) Lamarckian selection
Swidden
Shift to a new plot to allow the other one to get its nutrients back
1. Grasping ability 2. Reliance on sight over smell 3. Reliance on hand over nose 4. Brain complexity 5. Parental investment 6. Sociality
Six primate tendencies?
Toumai
Small brain and flatter face like a human; shorter canines compared to chimps
Gorillas
Small groups typically and high degree of sexual dimorphism
Chimps
Smaller degree of sexual dimorphism (females are 88% of the size of males, which is same for humans)
Gracile
Smaller teeth and reduced cranial morphology; less rugged; smaller faces than robust
Sororate or levirate
Some customs preserve the relationship between two groups of kin in the case of spousal death
Homo sapien sapien
Some evolutionary lines were dead-ends while others ultimately resulted in __________ ____________ _____________-
Serial monogamy
Some in the US practice _______________ ___________________ which is when they have more than one partner but not at the same time
Africa
Sometime around 200,000 years ago, anatomically modern humans evolved from ancestors who had remained in _________________. Like Homo erectus before them, they spread out of Africa.
Denisovans
Split from ancestral neandertals around 400,000 years ago
Homo habilis
Still Australopith-like in many ways; bigger brain but not by much than them )half the size of human brain); small bodies and long arms which is more in line with ape than human; has Oldowan pebble tools; known as "handy man"; species most identified with the emergence of tool use
Cosmologies
Stories we tell ourselves about ourselves trying to explain how we got to where we are today
Nocturnal
Strepsirrhines tend to be _______________
Smaller; brains
Strepsirrhines tend to be __________________ than Haplorrhines and have smaller ___________________
Lemurs
Strepsirrhines?
Organization and oversight
Surplus production led to greater ___________________ and ___________________ of food stores
Behavioral modernity
Symbolic thought, bodily adornment, symbolic expression; includes tattoos, hairstyles, earrings are all examples of ________________ ____________________; also religion
The Hilly Flanks
The Fertile Crescent in the Middle East is also known as what?
Surplus
The Natufians built storehouses because they had a what?
Nuer
The designated "son" and wife have a social relationship not a sexual one
Economics
The discipline we call __________________________ developed as part of industrial society, as a way of understanding how goods and services are produced, distributed, and consumed in modern, cash-based market economies
2.5
The evolution of our genus, Homo, has taken place during the last 2.5 million years
Alluvial Plains
The first states developed in the ____________ ______________
Iraq; Iran
The first states developed in the alluvial plains (Tigris and Euphrates/Mesopotamia) of what is now _________ (then Sumer) and _________ (then Elam) between 6,000 and 5,500 BP
3.3
The first stone tools appeared about _____ mya
2-5
The hominins (ancestors of humans and only humans) evolved into several species about __________ million years ago
Chimps and humans
The idea of a "missing link" between ____________ and ___________ is based on a false assumption
Anterior (towards the front)
The more ______________ your forum magnum the more upright you are
Posterior (toward the back)
The more ______________ your forum magnum, the less upright you are
Europe
The neandertals (Homo neandertalensis) lived in ______________
Formalists
argue that groups that are not capitalist are still capitalists at heart and will operate as such
Hogopan
It was not a gorilla, chimp, or human, but we don't know what it was specifically
Ardi
-Was a female and pretty small -Large hands, opposable thumbs, and opposable big toes -Might be hominins, not just hominids - status open for debate
1. High plateau 2. Hilly flanks 3. Piedmont steppes 4. Alluvial plain
4 parts of the vertical economy?
1. Greater organization of harvest 2. Greater limitation of access 3. Increased routinization of distribution 4. New limits on consumption
4 results of having a surplus?
1. Larger and more densely populated than previous settlements 2. Productive farming economies supporting dense populations, often including cities 3. Taxation 4. Monumental architecture 5. Had some form of record-keeping, usually a written script (like cuneiform) 6. Social stratification
6 key attributes of early cities/states?
Gorillas
6-8 million years ago was our last shared ancestor with them
Foraging
Adaptive strategy that existed more than 10,000 years ago?
Food production
Advent of ___________ ______________ is mentioned explicitly in the Book of Genesis
Punishment (through hard work, you will eat from the ground)
Agriculture in the book of Genesis is _______________________
Irrigation
Allowed for even bigger surpluses?
Bipedalism (and bipedal locomotion)
Allows you to see over the grass in the grassland, see great distances, less exposed surface area so could regulate body temp better, frees up your hands to carry things such as offspring, provisions, and even tools
Parental investment
Almost all give birth to a single baby and not litters, but there are exceptions. Primate babies take a lot longer to develop because of their developed brain; babies are helpless for the first few months and rely on parents
Gender; kin
Americans marry out of our _____________ and our own __________
Religion, economic class, etc.
Americans, however, marry in great proportions into the same:
Hominins
Ancestors of humans and only humans
8
Ancestral hominids (which evolved into chimps, gorillas, and humans) appeared about ____ million years ago
Immature birth
Another reason why infants are dependent on us (extended periods of parental investment) bc their brains are no where close to done when they are born
Cosmology
Anthropology is a new and improved ____________________
Australopiths
Ape-like from top-down (such as dentition, cranial morphology, less upright than humans, smaller brain and bodies, sexual dimorphism)
Food producers
Are doing the labor and are often commoners and slaves
No, this would be an ethnocentric judgement. A taboo against incest is a human universal, but cultures differ on who they define as their kin and thus what they define to be incest.
Are some cultures more permissive in regards to incest than others?
Homo erectus
Arrived roughly 100,000 years after H. habilis
Birth canals
As brain sizes got larger, ________ ___________ got larger to accommodate larger skulls and the larger brains inside them
Utopia
As societies became more urban, industrial, and stratified, humans have conceptualized these other ways of life as a form of ____________
Resources; large
As some animals went extinct, certain groups disappeared permanently so the humans had to pursue new _____________________ and overtime they focused less on _____________ animals
Carrying capacity
As they exceeded _________________ _________________, people spilled into regions that did not support grains and wild game
Taxonomies
Assign and organize organisms into categories according to their relatedness and resemblance
Correlations
Associations or co-variations between two or more variables
The neanderthals
Ate meat and lots of it; not a diverse diet instead heavily focused on meat; not a lot of vegetation to gather in ice-age Europe; improved stone tools helped them hunt animals
Denisovans
Based on wisdom tooth and finger fragment they reconstructed the entire genome of the species
"Familiarity breeds contempt"
Basically means the more we know people, the less we like them
Fraternal polyandry
Basically when brothers share a wife
Analogies
Bats and birds are another example of what?
Natufians
Became sedentary to remain close to wild grain
The State
Because larger surpluses meant more oversight and greater administration, what emerged?
Bridewealth
Gifts given by groom's family to bride's family
Fire
Enabled our ancestors (and closely related ancestral species) to cook vegetables and meat, feed younger and older members softer foods, and eliminated certain parasites from their diet
Irrigation
Enabled people to live in large towns and cities on the alluvial plain, which had rich soils
Polyandry
Ensures at least one man at home to accomplish male activities
Polygyny
Even when _____________ is encouraged, most people tend to be monogamous
The neanderthals
Evidence of interbreeding with Homo sapiens sapiens, but not significant enough to suggest interbreeding to extinction -- basically out-competed by Homo sapiens sapiens
Hominids
Evolved into chimps, gorillas, and humans
A. africanus
Example of gracile Australopiths?
Polyandrous
Expanded __________________ households allow brothers to pool resources
The neanderthals
Face pulled forward, long broad noses, heavy brow ridges, slanting foreheads, massive faces, and large jaws
Natufians
First worked out the initial adaptation to this array of climates
Australopithecus
Firstly recognized Hominin species?
Caste - Caste System in India (endogamy)
Five stratified levels that are fixed at birth. Social stratifications based on wealth; preferences for arranged marriages and marrying people within your _____________ so you do not damage your reputation - what is this referring to?
Karl Marx
Focused on the importance of human labor in transforming raw materials into desired products
Economic Anthropology
Focuses not just on cross-cultural comparison but also individual motivations within their own personal economic systems
Homo habilis; Australopithecus
For decades the first stone tools were associated with the first member of our genus, ________ ________ ("Handy man") but the ________________________ garhi has presented evidence of tool use
Love, sex, and choice
For most Americans, marriage is supposed to be based on what three things?
-Explicitly about economics -Made by parents -Against the will of one of the participants -For reasons other than love, or for impersonal reasons
For most Americans, marriage should not be:
Incestuous union: ego's father's child with second wife Non-incestuous union: ego's mother's child with second husband
For the Lakher of SE India, what is and is not considered an incestuous union?
Utopian
Foraging societies are not __________________, but these agricultural worlds live better lives than industrialized worlds.
Denisovans
Found in Southern Siberia?
Middle East, China, India/Pakistan, and Egypt
Four early states emerged in similar ecologies near the river valleys with lots of available water; all emerged by about 4000 years ago. What are they?
1. Men marrying later in life 2. The inheritance of a widow from a deceased brother 3. Increased prestige or household productivity 4. An infertile wife
Four reasons for polygyny?
Kenya
Further, in 2015 researchers discovered stone tools that were 3.3 mya in ___________
Foraging
Gender division of labor so men hunt and women gather
Phylogeny
Genetic relatedness based on common ancestry
2
Genus Homo came on the scene roughly ___ mya
Robust Australopiths
Genus Paranthropus?
Broad spectrum
Getting a broad spectrum of food from different sources and eating all kinds of foods from different sources
Dowry
Gifts given by bride's family to grooms' family
Cave paintings
Independent invention in human cultural history because these are found in different places throughout the world
Horticulture
Inequalities appear and decent groups and ways to keep the same plot of land in the same family
The Market Principle
Infinite Wants, Scarce Means, Profit Maximization, and Rationality
Domestication
Involved the alteration of both plants and animals?
Lobola
Is a form of bridewealth specific to Mozambique?
Brow ridge
Is a response to ripping and tearing work done by your front teeth
Hilly Flanks
Is a subtropical woody zone that flanks two rivers
Piedmont steppes
Is a treeless plain
Sagittal crest
Is also a result of chewing muscles and has to do with the shape of the back of your head
Marriage
Is always a relationship based on exchange or refusal to exchange
Industrialism
Is based on machines and chemical processes (fuel), which make the development of manufacturing, mass production, and mechanization possible
Bridewealth
Is compensatory to compensate for removing her from her origin and domestic unit and because her children will not belong to her father's family
Alluvial plain
Is flat and lower elevation and very fertile and rich soil
Dowry
Is for taking care of the bride and for providing for her and is often seen in male-dominated societies; often has a negative association and makes the woman out to be a burden
Hominin
Is more specific label, after the split perhaps?
Marriage
Is often a system of alliances between families and descent groups
Horticulture
Is smaller scale and less permanent than agriculture
Economic anthropology
Is the study of economics in comparative perspective
Marriage
It is an intensely personal choice.
Monkeys
It is common to refer to chimps as _________________, but this is incorrect in terms of taxonomic labels
Economic Anthropology
It is the part of the discipline that debates issues of human nature that relate directly to the decisions of daily life and making a living
Homo
Nevertheless, tool use was most widespread and developed amongst the genus __________
Platyrrhines
New World Monkeys?
Domestication; Hilly Flanks
New colonists in the less desired regions of the vertical economy stumbled upon _______________ in an attempt to recreate the ____________ ______________ economy in regions that did not support wild grain and wild game
1. Decline in public health 2. Diseases and epidemics 3. Poverty, inequality, and crime 4. Large-scale warfare 5. Environmental degradation
New problems in the cities/states?
Toumai
No post cranial remains so just the skull but the skull was shattered into fragments; not enough data to decide what it was
Natufians
Nomads without permanent settlements to follow food; became more sedentary in Hilly Flanks region bc of grains and wild game
Evolution
Not all changing at a steady rate bc ___________________ does not have a predetermined end point
Literacy
Not all states had writing but _______________ helped facilitate the flow and storing of information
Carrying capacity
Number of people that can be supported by the food base
Production organizers
Officials and artisans and oversee the food producers
Agriculture
bigger yield and radical alterations of the environment
Generalized
close and not selfish
Balanced
close but not as close and a little selfish
Means
in agriculture societies, ____________ of production are land and farms
Capitalism
is the only form of economic rationality in neoclassical economics
Capitalism
is viewed as the only form of economic rationality
Agriculture
larger-scale, more permanent, more labor intensive, and more radical alterations of the environment
Generalized
meat sharing is _________________ reciprocity
Economics
modern __________________ is based on the assumption that people have infinite wants but have limited means to get everything so we try to get what we want for less which is profit maximization and is viewed as rational