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BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA

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Page 2: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Early Hominoid – Where to Look?Rift Valley of East Africa

Southern Africa

3 Major Groups

Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya)

Australopiths (4.2- 1 mya)Early Homo

(2.4 – 1.4)

Page 3: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

How far back?

7 – 8 million years

70% of our history resides in Africa

Extensive changes in the last 10 years1992 3-4 million1998 4.4 2000 62003 7 million

Page 4: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Lucy 3.7 –3.5 mya

Don Johanson Dicovered in Hadar in 1974

Lucy in combination w/ Leakey footprints tell us about locomotion and stature

Lucy 40% of skeleton, one of three most complete, Pre-100,000

Accurate Dates due to Volcanic Ash layers

Page 5: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Laetoli (Ash Footprints)

Discovered in 1978

Page 6: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

1. Convergent Big Toe

2. Clearly Bipedal

3. Arch

4. Slow Moving “Strol”

5. Short Stride

Laetoli (Ash Footprints)

Page 7: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Chapter 9

The Earliest Dispersal of the Genus Homo: Homo erectus and

Contemporaries

Page 8: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths
Page 9: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Left: Homo Erectus (1mya)Center: Australopithicus afarensis (2.5mya)

Right: Homo Neandertalensis (100,000-32,000ya)

Page 10: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths
Page 12: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

First Dispersal of the Hominins• Close to 2 million years ago, hominins

expanded out of Africa into other areas of the Old World.

• Since the early hominin fossils have been found only in Africa, it seems that hominins were restricted to this continent for as long as 5 million years.

Page 13: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

First Dispersal of the Hominins• After 2 mya, there’s less diversity in these

hominins than in their pre-australopith and australopith predecessors.

• There is universal agreement that the hominins found outside of Africa are members of genus Homo.

• Homo erectus is the species for which there is the most evidence.

Page 14: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Homo erectus – A New Kind of Hominin

• The first hominin to expand into new regions of the Old World.

• As a species, H. erectus existed over 1 million years.

• We can understand its success as a hominid species based on behavioral capacities (i.e.) more elaborate tool use) and physical changes (i.e. larger).

Page 15: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Acheulian Biface Acheulean tools are typically

found with Homo erectus remains.

Lower to Middle Pleistocene • A basic tool of the Acheulian

tradition.• Acheulian tool kits are common

in Africa, southwest Asia, and western Europe, but they’re thought to be less common elsewhere.

Page 16: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Homo erectus

• Discoveries from East Africa have established Homo erectus by 1.8 m.y.a.

• Some researchers see anatomical differences between the African and Asian discoveries. – They place African fossils into the Homo ergaster

species.• Analyses show that H. erectus/ergaster represents

closely related species and possibly geographical varieties of a single species

Page 17: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Grade• H.erectus hominins represent a different grade of evolution

than their African predecessors.• Grade refers to a grouping of organisms sharing a similar

adaptive pattern.• Grade implies nothing directly about shared ancestry, but

implies general adaptive aspects of a group of animals

Page 18: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Morphology of Homo erectus • Living in different environments over much of

the Old World, H. erectus populations shared several common physical traits including…

Page 19: BECOMING HUMAN PART 1 NOVA. Early Hominoid – Where to Look? Rift Valley of East Africa Southern Africa 3 Major Groups Pre-australopiths (7-4.4mya) Australopiths

Body Size• Adult weight >100 lbs,

average adult height of ca. 5 feet 6 inches

• Sexually dimorphic, weight and height varied according to sex

• Increased robusticity (heavily built body) that dominated hominin evolution until anatomically modern H. sapiens