Human Species test 3

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Flores

Liang Bua Cave on an island east of Java, small bodied and small brained hominid. Nicknamed 'hobbits'

Olduvai

Louis Leakey unearthed a fossil skull at Olduvai, cranial capacity is relatively big and brow ridge is huge, thinner cranium than Asian H. Erectus which leads researchers to argue separate species of 'Homo Ergaster'

Tabun Cave

Mt. Carmel in Israel, less robust than european classic, contemporary with modern H Sapiens nearby

Apollo 11

Namibia, rock shelter, painted slabs

Middle Paleolithic

Neandertal associated with this period, and stone industry called 'Mousterian' industry

Results of DNA comparison

Neandertal seem more different from contemporary Homo Sapiens. Seem isolated from other hominins, a lineage separated from Modern H. Sapiens ancestors

Gran Dolina Site

Northern Spain, in Atapuerca region, Earliest hominid found in Western Europe, spanish paleoanthropologist named new species Homo Antecessor

Pinnacle Point

Ocher as possible personal adornment. Small stone tools (microlith)

Kabwe, Africa

One of the best known premodern fossils, complete cranium, mixture of older and recent traits, robust browridge but larger (modern) brain case

Cultural remains in Zhoukoudian

One of the longest history of habitation in the world, over 100,000 artifacts found. Site occupied for almost 250,000 yrs.

H. Erectus from Java

Other sites with fossils: Modjokerto, Sangiran, Ngnandong

Human Origins

Paleoanthropologists developed two major theories which are opposed to each other. 1. complete replacement, 2. regional continuity, and 3. partial replacement (compromising theory)

Abrigo de Lagar Velho

Portugal. Mixture of traits, best evidence for hybridization. 4 yr old child's skeleton. Dates later than last clearly Neandertal find, after or not as old as other Neandertals

Regional Populations

Some isolated regions died out, others continued 1. In Africa, Homo Heidelbergensis evolved into modern Homo Sapiens, 2. In Europe, Homo Heidelbergensis evolved into Neandertal 1

Terra Amata

Southern France, detailed middle pleistocene reconstruction of a shelter, evidence of short-term seasonal visits

La Chapelle-aux-Saints

Southwest France, Western Europe, important discovery, shallow grave with flexed burial

Altamira Cave

Spain. Bison in red and black. Used bulges in cave to give relief. Meaning not known, religious or magical maybe?

Qafzeh Cave

Tabun Cave nearby indicated modern Homo Sapiens and Neandertals occupations overlapped

Central Asia

Teshik-Tash site, Uzebkistan. Evidence that Neandertal range extended eastward into Central Asia

Around 200,000 yrs ago

1st modern Homo Sapiens evolve in Africa, descendents spread throughout Old World and later to New World

Technological Trends in Homo Erectus

Acheulian hand axes have been found with remains of large animals. Homo Erectus is seen as a hunter and scavenger

Homo Heidelbergensis Fossils

Africa and Europe more similar to each other, traits from both Homo Erectus and Homo Sapiens

Premodern Humans of the Middle Pleistocene

Africa, Europe, Asia

Earliest Discoveries of Modern Humans

Africa, The Near East, Asia, Australia, Central Europe, Western Europe, Flores (Indonesia)

Southern Africa

Apollo 11 rock shelter (Namibia), blombos cave, pinnacle point

Sima de los Huesos

Atapuerca in Spain near Gran Dolina, site called Sima de los Huesos (pile of bones), most of the Middle Pleistocene hominids remains found in world

Burins

Common upper paleolithic tool. pointed stone blade. working wood, bone, and antler. Small chisel-like for engraving of bone

Central Africa, Katanda Site

Congo, excavations show remarkable bone craftsmanship. Harpoons were made from ribs or long bone splinters of large mammals. Ground flat and precisely pressured flaked to made row of barbs.

Vindija Cave (Central Europe)

Croatia, less robust than classic, among most recent Neandertals found, smaller browridge and slight chin development. Possible link with modern Homo Sapiens

African Migration

Current evidence that earliest modern humans from Africa

Neandertal DNA (mtDNA)

DNA from several, including original Neander Valley Fossil. Mitochondrial most often used, extracted and amplified

Omo

Ethiopia, earliest of the fully modern found in Africa

Herto

Ethiopia, well-preserved and well-dated Homo Sapiens fossils. Best dated hominid fossil of time period, most conclusive evidence of African origin of modern humans

Mitochondrial DNA

Evidence of African origin, genetic data (living peoples), concluded the world's population, descended from single African lineage

Cro-Magnon

France, most famous site of early moderns. Eight individuals, best known Western European samples. France's earliest anatomically modern human. Associated with Aurignacian tool assemblage, an upper paleolithic industry

Grotte Chauvet

France. Dots, stenciled handprints, blow liquid pigment on hand held flat on wall. Hundreds of animals, by same artist? unknown.

Lascauz Cave

France. Wild bulls dominate 'hall of bulls' and horses, deer, and other animals. Red, Black, Yellow

Schoningen

Germany, three preserved wooden spears, large, finely made and expertly balanced, throwing spears for large animals, numerous horse bones found, indicate advanced hunting

The Partial Replacement Model

Gradual dispersal of Homo Sapien Sapiens out of Africa. Modern humans mixed with local archaic populations in Eurasia. Some interbreeding

Way of Life, Traditional View

H. Erectus at Zhoukoudian, traditionally described as hunter-gatherer who killed deer and horses, used fire, this interpretation now rejected by some

Transitional Europe

Hominids in Europe continue into Upper Pleistocene, evolution of premoderns takes unique direction, appearance and expansion of Neandertals

New Kind/Grade of Hominin

Homo erectus and contemporaries are a new kind and 1st hominins to leave Africa, over 100lbs, 5 '6, heavily built, brain size most obvious difference

Neandertal Discoveries

Western Europe (France and Spain) Central Europe (including Croatia) Western Asia (including Israel and Iraq in southwest Asia) Central Asia (including Uzbekistan)

Grade

a grouping with similar adaptive patterns

Herbivores in Pleistocene

abundant pasture for herbivorous animals. Large herds of reindeer, mammoths, bison, horses, across tundra and grasslands

Modern 'Homo Sapiens'

all contemporaries are placed in this species, first are probably descendants of premodern humans. Particularly African populations of H. Heidelbergensis

Age of Technological Innovation

anatomically modern humans, upper paleolithic. new and specialized tools

Klasies River Mouth Cave

and Border Cave. Somewhat later than Omo, Southern Africa on coast. Fully anatomically modern form. Seems likely that modern humans appeared in East Africa and migrated to Southern Africa

Archaic Homo Sapiens

another name for premoderns because they were considered an early, primitive, transitional Homo Sapien. Considered separate species. replaced by the name Homo Heidelbergensis in Europe and Africa

Skhul Cave

at Mt. Carmel, ten individuals, earliest good evidence of anatomically modern humans out of Africa

Upper Paleolithic

began in western europe. Five cultural periods based on stone tool technologies: Chatelperronian, Aurignacian, Gravettian, Solutrean, Magdalenian

Behavior Differences

behavior may explain what happened to Neandertals, including symbolic behavior. Homo sapeins may have had significant advantage. Expanded ability to symbolize, communicate, organize social activties

Acheulian Hand Axe

best known biface tool

Cultural Innovations

better shelters, sewn tailored clothing, increased use of bone, ivory, and antler

Blombos

bone tools, beads, ocher fragments

Neandertal Brain

brain is larger than today's humans, possibly a cold weather adaptation

Shanidar

cave in Iraq, deliberate burials. Severely injured person survived, helped by others

Differences of Premoderns

certain trends over time include brain expansion, less angled back of skull, diverse group over three continents, disagreement on how to classify

Nuclear DNA

confirms early divergence, Neandertal was separate for long time

Asian Homo Erectus

crania from Java to China similar, explained by Homo Erectus migration from Java to China, differ from older African Homo Erectus

Probable Hunter

definitely a scavenger, probably a hunter

Neandertal Burials

deliberately buried their dead, many placed in flexed position. Body bent with arms and legs drawn up to chest

Neandertal DNA

distinctive, strong direct evidence of genetic discontinuity between Neandertal and early fully modern humans. Argues for substantial replacement

Discoveries in Peking

dragon bones used as medicine and aphrodisiacs, geological survey of China investigated sites where bones collected, discovered fossils at Zhoukoudian cave

Eugene Dubois

dutch anatomist, first with research program to find fossils of the 'missing link', discovered Pithecanthropus Erectus

Lake Mungo

earliest finds in Australia, dates controversial

Near East

early modern Homo Sapiens sites in Israel, Skhul Cave, Qafzeh

Dmanisi

easternmost Europe, republic of Georgia, new fossils dated radiometrically, earliest African emigrants

End of Upper Paleolithic

ending of the Ice Age. Temperature rises, glaciers retreat. Dynamic age doomed by climatic changes. Traditional prey animals disappear. (decrease in herds, grassland replaced by forests)

Shelters

evidence of temporary shelters at several sites including Terra Amata site

Macellin Boule

famous paleontologist studied the La Chapelle skeleton, unusually robust, described find as brutish and bent-kneed and not fully bipedal

Venuses

female figurines throughout Europe. Some realistically carved. Others with sexual characteristics exaggerated. Perhaps for fertility or ritual purposes

Pithecanthropus Erectus

fossils found along Solo river near Trinil, found skullcap and femur. Discovery of 'ape man' criticized but now agreed that it is Homo Erectus

Why Similar

gene flow between these archaic populations. Modern humans not separate species, never independent

Cranial Shape of Homo Erectus

heavily built cranium, thick bone, large brow ridges, maximum cranial breath below ears

premodern humans

hominids that followed Homo Erectus. Before anatomically modern humans, includes homo heidelbergensis and others like Neandertal

Glaciations

ice sheets covered much of the northern continents, northern areas of europe and Asia became uninhabitable

Neandertal Technology

improved on Levallois technique, new techniques to produce more flakes from same core. Used many flake tools: Bone, ivory, antler tools very rare

Portable Art

in addition to cave art. numerous small sculptures in Europe, elaborate engravings on tools and handles

Other European Sites

in west europe, H. Erectus like fossils not as early

Australia

inhabited by modern humans, not connected to mainland... possible bamboo rafts used

Cave Art

known from more than 150 sites. Majority in France and Spain. People in other areas didnt use deep caves for art, painted and carved on rock surfaces in the open that eroded away.

Neandertal Cranium and Face

larger, long, low, bulging at sides, browridges arched, face projects

Zhoukoudian Homo Erectus

largest collection of H. erectus material anywhere, more than 40 male and female adults and children

Homo Erectus in Java

last of homo erectus contemporary with Homo Sapiens, no artifacts found

Magdalenian

last stage of Upper Paleolithic, more advances in technology

Trends in Homo Erectus

liked to travel, stone tools found on island of Flores suggest construction of ocean going vessels, embraced culture as a strategy of adaptation

The Regional Continuity Model (Multiregional evolution)

local populations in Europe, Asia and Africa evolve into anatomically modern humans

Late Pleistocene

major environmental shifts during this period. last glacial period, late ice age

Western Europe

many anatomically modern human fossils

China

mix of earlier and later characteristics, Chinese paleoanthropologists suggest some features: shared with homo erectus fossils from Zhoukoudian, found in modern homo sapiens in China today. Controversial view that a separate Homo erectus lineage led to modern Chinese

Model (recent African Evolution)

modern populations arose only in Africa, migrated from Africa replacing populations in Europe and Asia. (Africa is their single origin)

Homo Heidelbergensis

more consensus about H. Heidelbergensis, premodern fossils from African and Europe, placed within Homo Heidelbergensis

Y- Chromosome

more genetic data, variation in DNA less compared to other primates, Bolsters complete replacement model

Europe

more middle pleistocene fossils found in Europe than other regions

West Turkana/Nariokotome

most complete H. Erectus skeleton ever found was uncovered, frequently called 'Homo Ergaster', Nariokotome in Kenya was a boy about 12 yrs old

Neandertal Fossils in Europe

most found here, more robust than other areas. Called 'Classic' in Western Europe

Solutrean Blades

most highly developed upper paleolithic industry, skill and aesthetic appreciation, parallel flaked lance heads, so delicate considered as possible 'art'

Middle Pleistocene

most premodern hominids lived during this period, neandertals lived in the Upper Pleistocene

Terrain of Late Pleistocene

much of Eurasia dotted with lakes and marshes, permafrost prevents growth of trees. Treeless tundra and steppe in Eurasia. Flowering plants, mosses, other vegetation in short summer

Sungir

near Moscow, most spectacular burial. Bed of red ocher, thousands of ivory beads, mammoth tusk spears

Genetic Evidence

new research with advances in molecular biology. Extract, amplify, and sequence ancient DNA

Gran Dolina

northern Spain at Atapuerca, Fossils are not Homo Erectus, Spanish researchers claimed it was another species but it might be early Homo Heidelbergensis

Neandertal Art

not common, only small personal items

Grave Goods

not elaborate, lacked artifcats, not as complex as later anatomically modern H. Sapiens

The Pleistocene

often called the Ice Age, glacial advances and retreats, hominids impacted

Bodo, Africa

one of the earliest Homo Heidelbergensis in Africa, evidence of butchering

Ceprano

only one individual but may be among best evidence of Homo Erectus in Europe, central italy

Neandertals

premodern Humans of the Upper Pleistocene, difficult to place, classified as Homo Sapiens (Homo Sapiens Neandertalensis) or as a separate species, Homo Neandertalensis

Africa

premodern fossils found at several sites in South and East Africa

Premoderns and Homo Erectus

premoderns generally succeeded Homo Erectus, except coexisted for long periods in Asia

Neandertal Speech and Symbolic Behavior

prevailing consensus has been that they were capable of articulate speech

Challenges of Traditional View

probably not a hunter, remains are refuse of giant hyena carnivores, probably didn't make fire. burning was after fossilization, the 'ash' is organic settlement, cave probably not inhabited, it had a vertical shaft and was a 'trap' instead of a shelter

Prehistoric Art... Europe

reached its climax during final phases of Upper Paleolithic. Particularly during the Magdalenian

Dmanisi

recall that this is one of the earliest Homo erectus found anywhere, could be classified as 'early' Homo cause it's primitive, 3 cranium and a mandible

Europe

recent discoveries push time back for Homo Erectus in Europe.

Abundance in Pleistocene

relative, upper paleolithic people spread over Europe. Caves, open-air camps, large shelters, elaborate burials

Postcranial Neandertal

robust, barrel-chested, powerful muscles, shorter limbs, adaptation to living in cold climate

Africa

rock art possible as early as in Europe in Southern Africa

Africa

several early fossils are fully anatomically modern forms. Omo (Ethiopia), Klasies River Mouth Cave (South Africa), Herto

Dmanisi Skulls

similar to East Africa Homo Erectus, however it has less robust browridge, smaller cranial capacity, front looks like 'early homo' of east Africa

Similarities of African Premoderns

single species, Homo Heidelbergensis, and similar to premoderns in Europe

Kow Swamp

some archaic traits difficult to explain, more 'robust' than Lake Mungo

Fire

some evidence for controlled use

Characteristics of Premoderns

some homo erectus characteristics, and modern features, larger brain, rounded brain case, maximum breath higher, trend toward brain expansion

Sima de los Huesos Morphology

some indications of early Neandertal-like pattern (arching eyebrows, projecting midface), Homo Heidlebergensis or a very early Neandertal ancestor

Hunting

some strong cases, especially the recent find at Schoningen in Germany

Biface Tools

stone that worked on both sides and used to cut, scrape, pound, and dig. Acheulian hand ax best known type

Neandertal Subsistence

successful hunters, used close-proximity spears, no long distance weapons, dangerous (many injuries), numerous fractures, head and neck injuries

Homo Erectus in Java

survives a long time. Other population branched off from some early inhabitants of Indonesia

The Lavallois Technique

technique for stone tool making, was used in Africa and Europe. Requires several steps to control flake size and shape

Summary of East African Homo Erectus

term Homo Ergaster suggested for African remains because scientists argue that African and Asian erectus should be separate species. But current consensus- all Homo Erectus

Homo Floresiensis

three ft tall, probably descended from Homo Erectus populations. Isolated island population diverged. Natural selection favors reduced body size, dwarf elephants also found in same geological beds.

Homo Heidelbergensis

transitional, probable ancestor to both modern humans and Neandertals

Upper Paleolithic Art

upper paleolithic well-known for art. best known in Europe. includes North Africa, South Africa, Australia

Mousterian

widespread, Europe, North Africa, as far east as central Asia and other areas. Stone industry

Spear Thrower(atlatl), Harpoon, Bow and Arrow

A hooked rod enhancing force and distance, barbed harpoons for salmon and other fish. Bow and arrow may have been used for first time

Kebara Cave

Israel near Tabun Cave, skeleton with most complete pelvis. First 'hyoid' bone found (base of tongue), important for reconstructing speech capabilities


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