anthrcul test 2
What does political mean?
- The exercise of power. - Regulation of relations among groups -.Decision making, dispute management, and conflict resolution.
What are biological anthropology's major concentrations?
1. Human biology, anthropometry, and genetics 2. Human evolution and paleoanthropology 3. primatology
How do fossils form?
1. Organism dies 2. decomposition and rapid sedimentation 3. minerals in ground water replace bone 4. bone becomes mineralized and turns to rock
homo erectus
1.9-0.5 mil years ago, first homo outside of Africa (western and eastern asia), 5th oldest fossil, first to intentionally use fire and acheulean (symmetrical) tools
homo habilis
2.8-1.44 mil years ago, still only in Africa, name means "handy man", 4th oldest fossil, associated with oldowon tools even though they did not invent them
Phylogenetic tree
A diagram representing the phylogeny of a species
Phylogeny
A genetic relatedness of species based on common ancestry
Analogies
Adaptive traits due to convergent evolution
wealth
All a person's material assets: income, land, and other private property
sagittal crest
Bony projection on top of the cranium for attachment of chewing muscles.
What are our two closest relatives?
Chimpanzees and bonobos
prestige
Esteem respect or approval for acts, deeds, and qualities
What are the six primate adaptations?
Grasping, smell to sight, nose to hand, brain complexity, parental investment (gorilla), and sociality (orangutans opening coconuts)
Australopithecus afarensis
Lucy, found in East Africa , 3.8-3 million years ago (3rd oldest fossil)
Homo Sapien
Modern humans (about 0.25 mil years ago to present), everywhere (newest fossil)
Platyrrhines
NEW WORLD: broad septum, flat nose, arboreal, prehensile tails
dentition
Natural teeth in the dental arch/ arrangement of teeth
la chapelle aux saints
Neanderthal site in France. la chapelle aux saints 1 is the name of remains of a specific individual
Cattarrhines
OLD WORLD: narrow septum, sharp nose, mostly arboreal, patches for sitting
What is a tarsier?
One of the smallest primates, has massive eyes, is used for the smell to sight example of primate adaptations
power
The ability to exercise one's will over others and get what one wants
authority
The formal, socially approved use of power
Why do anthropologists study primates?
They are our closest living relatives, and they are able to compare our behavior to theirs (competition, cooperation, sharing, and care, behavioral ecology)
Homologies
Traits inherited from a common ancestor
shared derived traits
a common ancestor must have been shared recently
brachiation
a method of movement that uses the arms to swing from branch to branch
levallois
a tool technology in which uniform flakes are struck from a prepared core
domesticating animals
adapting animals for human use, they tend to become smaller over time
weapons of the weak
another name for hidden transcript
primitive traits
are ancestral, and were apparent in the last common ancestor
hafting
attaching an artifact to a haft; starting to see more lighter/throwing spears, clovis points, atlatl
four levels of political organization (sociopolitical typology)
band, tribe, chiefdom, state
Behavioral modernity
behavior based on symbolic thought and cultural creativity (AMH creating tools and art, consists of Venus of Willendorf)
what does social control make use of?
beliefs (hegemony) practices (surveillance) institution (prison/ the panopticon)
what makes humans unique?
bipedalism, teeth, brains
brow ridge
bone on frontal part of the skull
zygomatic arches
cheek bones
hidden transcript
critique of the power structure that goes on out of sight of those who hold power (private resistance)
dental arcade trend
dental arcade goes from being more u-shaped to more parabolic over time
hegemony
domination over others
Pros of bipedalism
energy efficient (can exchange potential for kinetic energy), frees the hands, can see farther distances due to height
broad spectrum revolution
foraging of varied plant and animal foods at end of Ice Age; prelude to Neolithic
What makes humans unique?
foramen magnum, lumbar lordosis, pelvis, longer lower limbs, angled femur, tibia, foot, larger brain, longer childhood, smaller teeth
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
found in chad, (oldest fossil)
Ardipithecus ramidus
found in ethiopia and kenya, second oldest
Svante Paabo
geneticist, showed that we share DNA with Neanderthals
hominid
group consisting of all living and extinct great apes
hominin
group consisting of modern humans, extinct human species and immediate ancestors
downside of functional specialization
harder work, more crime and war, slavery, social inequity, health declines, environmental degradation
foramen magnum trend
hole shifts more toward center of skull over time
band
kin based group, smallest of four (less than 100 people), no formal leadership, foraging
state
kinship is less important, society w central government, social strata
apes
larger body size, longer lifespans, more upright posture, larger brains, no tail
haplorrhines
larger brain size, both arboreal and terrestrial, mostly diurnal, larger bodies, more complex socially (humans are part of the haplorrhine category)
what are the three kinds of domesticated animals?
livestock (pigs), working animals, pets (dogs, cats)
arboreal
living in trees
prehensile tail
long tail that can coil tightly enough around a branch
what type of spears did neanderthals have?
neanderthals were heavier than human spears, and were more often stabbed as opposed to human spears, which were thrown.
Homo neanderthalensis
neanderthals, 6th oldest (2nd newest), 130,000-39,000 years ago, all across europe, start to use mousterian tools (which means different tools for different tasks)levallois
ned
ned was a neanderthal skeleton found in shanidar cave, he had a missing right hand, his skull was bashed in, yet he still survived. ned would have had to be taken care of in his condition, which shows that neanderthals did care for one another and have that level of compassion
benefits of functional specialization
new inventions, architecture, writing, trade, measuring, more reliable crop loads
phylogenetic relationships
new species evolve by splitting off from older species (can be placed on a phylogenetic tree)
catal huyuk
one of the first settlements/cities
independent invention
one of the rarest forms of cultural change because there is no diffusion and no acculturation. Different things are being independently invented in different areas (foraging to food production is an example of this)
public transcript
open, public interactions between oppressed people and their oppressors (public resistance)
Traits of chimpanzees
pan troglodytes, violence, warfare
Chiefdom
permanent political structure, kinship, social ranking, more agriculture
what four things must a state have to maintain themselves?
population control, judiciary, enforcement, fiscal support
knuckle walking
quadrupedal terrestrial movement
resistance
refusal to comply, using action or argument to deviate from a system of power
egalitarian
relatively equal relationships between people
Traits of bonobos
sex to avoid conflict, female holds power
stepsirrhines
small bodies, long snouts, big ears, arboreal, mostly nocturnal, can be solitary
tribe
still kin based, slightly larger than band, achieved status, egalitarian, horticulture and pastoralism
types of social strata
subordinate (under privileged) and superordinate (privileged)
domesticating plants
taking wild plants and adapting them for human use, downside is they have to be planted by humans, example is teosinte (corn changing over time)
teeth trend
teeth go from being small incisors and big molars, to approximately equal sized incisors and molars
the bigger the sagittal crest....
the bigger the jaw/chewing muscles
the bigger the cheekbones...
the bigger the zygomatic arches
foramen magnum
the hole in the base of the skull through which the spinal cord passes.
social stratification
the making of unrelated groups in terms of social status, differential access to resources, Access to wealth, prestige, authority, and power specifically
functional specialization
the manufacture of special tools for a particular job
sedentism
the practice of living in one place for a long time
parsimony principle
the preferred explanation of observed data is the simplest explanation
cranial capacity
the size of the brain case (as hominins evolve, the brain case expands)
derived traits
traits evolved since the time of the last common ancestor
neolithic period
when 50% of a society's diet is domesticated plants or animals
who would win in a fight: neanderthals or humans?
while we can never know for sure, we can theorize that human intelligence would trump neanderthal strength, and that humans would probably win