Chapter 17
How could a paleoanthropologist estimate the brain size and infer the diet of an early hominid?
A paleoanthropologist can estimate brain size by measuring skull fragments and can infer diet by examining the wear on teeth
Name three human characteristics that are adaptations for bipedalism.
Adaptations include a cup shaped pelvis, a s shaped spine, and a foot with short, aligned toes
Two fossils finds of 1995 that shed light on the evolution of bipedalism included
Australopithecus anamensis and Ardipithecus ramidus
humans
Bipedalism Cup-shaped pelvis Speech
How might the evolution of bipedalism have increased the fitness of early hominids?
Bipedalism would have allowed early hominids to see farther and would have allowed early hominids to see farther and would have freed the forelimbs for carrying and manipulating objects and providing defense
What evidence indicates that humans and chimpanzees are closely relates?
Chimpanzee and human DNA have a very high degree of similarity, suggesting that humans and chimpanzees may have shared an ancestor
Why is the human evolutionary tree sometimes described as a bush?
During the course of human evolution, several hominid forms that arose died out, leaving no descendants. the lineages of these various forms would resemble the multiple branches of a bush
What evidence besides fossil bones indicates that some early primates were bipedal?
Fossilized footprints indicate that some very early primates were bipedal
great apes
Gibbons, orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees
The hominid species with the most sophisticated tool-making abilities was
H. sapiens (cro-magnon)
The hominid species with the largest cranial capacity was
H. sapiens (neanderthal)
What was the earliest Homo species that has been discovered, and what two major traits did it have that distinguished it from australopithecines.
Homo habilis; its larger cranial capacity and tool use distinguished it from australopithecines
recent-African-orgin hypothesis
Homosapiens evolved from one population of H. erectus in Africa about 100,000 to 200,000 years ago and then olonized the world
How did the discovery of Australopithecus afarensis change many ideas about the evolution of humans?
It had been thought that bipedalism and a large brain with areas dedicated to higher reasoning and speech production evolved at the same time. A. afarensis showed that bipedalism evolved first
Some scientists hypothesize that Neanderthals were eliminated by modern Homosapiens through direct aggression or the spread of disease. In what other modern ways might modern H. sapiens have contributed to the disappearance of Neanderthals.
Modern H. sapiens may have outcompeted Neanderthals for food or shelter
primates
Movable fingers and toes Prehensile hands Color vision
anthropoid primates
Opposable thumb Well-developed collarbone Rotating shoulder joint
Explain how mitochondroid DNA evidence supports the recent African-orgin-hypothesis?
The differences in mitochondrial DNA among human populations would have taken only 100,000 years to 200,000 years to accumulate, suggesting that all modern humans arose fairly recently from one small group in Africa
The DNA of humans and chimpanzees is very similiar and their bodies share many features. Name a fundamental difference between humans and chimpanzees that has spurred the rapid intellectual and cultural evolution of humans?
The enlargement of the human brain probably accounts for the rapid intellectual and cultural evolution of humans
What evidence suggests that Australopithecus robustus and A. boisei were not ancestral to modern humans?
The heavy bone structure and large teeth of these hominids suggest that they were not ancestral to modern humans
Describe the position that neanderthals hold in the hominid phylogenetic tree
neanderthals are the earliest group of Homo sapiens. They are probably not ancestral to Cro-Magnons, nor to modern humans. Scientists think that they became extinct and left no descendants.
What are three distinguishing characteristics of the arms and collar of anthropoid primates?
They have a well-develpod collarbone, rotating shoulder joints, and partially rotating elbow joints
prosimian primates
Tree dwelling Resemble early primates Mostly nocturnal
Australopithecus robustus and A. boisei differed from A. afarensis by having
a heavier skull
hominid
a human or one of the immediate ancestors of humans
Fossil evidence regarding hominid evolution indicates that hominids
acquired bipedalsim before they developed a large brain and speech
The high degree of similarity between chimpanzee and human DNA suggests that
chimpanzees and humans are probably descended from a more primitive apelike ancestor
All primates have
color vision
Research on human evolution clearly shows that
different species of hominids lived at the same time
The primary materials that paleoanthropologists study is the
fossilized evidence of early hominids
The oldest hominid fossils to be found along with stone tools are the fossils of
homo habilis
multiregional hypothesis
homosapiens evolved in parallel all over Earth from different populations of H. erectus over a million years ago, and constant gene flow between populations has kept H. sapiens a single species
anthropoid primate
include marmosets, monkeys, apes, and humans
great ape
is a gibbon, orangutan, gorilla, or chimpanzee
opposable thumb
is a thumb that can be positioned opposite the fingers
bipedalism
is the ability to walk primarily on two legs
prehensile
means capable of grasping
quadrupedal
refers to the practice of walking on four limbs
Paleoanthropologists infer that Neanderthals wore clothing made of skins, because they have found
stone tools that were probably used to scrape animal hides near neanderthal fossils
Humans are the only mammals to have
the ability to walk primarily on two legs
Lucy
the nickname given to the original fossil find of Australopithecus afarensis
Paleoanthropologists infer that Homo habilis ate meat, because they have found
tool marks on animal bones discovered near H. habilis fossils
The shape of a fossils hominids pelvis can indicate whether the hominid
walked upright
The fossil primate Lucy
was about as tall as a chimpanzee
australopithecine
was any hominid of the genus australopithecus afarensis
To determine whether a fossil primate was a hominid, paleoanthropologists look mainly at whether the specimen
was bipedal