Chapter 23 Extended Lecture Outline




Chapter Outline

INTRODUCTION

		Darwin Supported Idea of Human Evolution
			Evolved from now extinct ancestor of African apes
			Used arguments from anatomy, development and behavior
			Fossil evidence weak then, stronger now	fig 23.1

		Idea Very Controversial
			Humanity a result of evolution not Divine creation
			Clashes between religious community and education

THE EVOLUTION OF PRIMATES

		Tree Shrews Were the Ancestors of the First Primates

		The Earliest Primates
			Occurred 40 million years ago
			Two improvements associated with primates
				Grasping fingers and toes
				Binocular vision
				Characteristics possessed by other animals, but not together
			Prosimians were first primates
				Lemurs are surviving examples	fig 23.2
				Are nocturnal animals

		Monkeys:  Day-Active Primates
			Primates became dinural about 36 million years ago
			Replaced prosimians rapidly
				Daytime hunting favored improvements in vision
				Improved senses governed by expanded brain
				Development of an opposable thumb
				Live in groups with complex social interactions
				Long childhood associated with development of large brains
			Evolved first in Central Africa
				Some migrated to South America, evolved in isolation
				Only New World monkeys have grasping, prehensile tails

		Apes:  The Path to Humanity
			Apes evolved independently from monkeys 25 million years ago	fig 23.3
				Have larger brains than monkeys
				Large size, but lack tails
				Exhibit most adaptable behavior of all mammals, excluding humans
			Hominids:  humans and their direct ancestors
			Hominoids:  hominids plus apes
			No know apes ever found in North America
			DNA studies explain ape evolution	fig 23.4
				Gibbons diverged 10 million years ago
				Split between hominids and gorillas/chimpanzees 5 million years ago
				Human and chimpanzee DNA differ in only 1.27% of nucleotide sequences

EVOLUTIONARY ORIGINS OF HUMANS

		Hominids
			New group of apes evolved on savannas 15 million years ago	fig 23.5
			Two critical steps on path to human evolution
				Bipedalism
				Larger brains

		The Discovery of Australopithecus
			Dart discovered first hominid fossil in 1924
				Jaw was rounded not pointed like ape
				Brain case larger than any ape of its size
			Fossil now dated at 2.8 millions years old
			Named Australopithecus africanus

		An Evolutionary Tree with Many Branches
			A. robustus fossil discovered in 1938
				Stockier build
				Massive teeth and jaws
			A. boisei fossil discovered by Mary Leakey in 1959
				More stockily built
				Massive bony ridge on crest of skull to anchor jaw muscles
				Almost 2 million years old
			Fourth kind of australopithecine fossil discovered in 1989
			Australopithecines are direct human ancestors
				Structure of feet and pelvis supports walking upright
				Large brains, teeth more human than apelike	fig 23.6

		Lucy:  The Oldest Hominid
			Johanson discovered oldest prehuman hominid fossil in 1974	fig 23.7
				40% complete, 3 million years old, scientific name A. afarensis
				Walked upright, head and brain more similar to ape
			More primitive specie, A. ramidus, discovered in 1994	fig 23.8
				Resembles chimpanzees
				May represent root of human evolutionary tree
			Genus Australopithecus immediately ancestral to genus Homo	fig 23.9

THE FIRST HUMANS

		Second Version Replaced Earliest Human Ancestors	fig 23.10

		African Origin:  Homo habilis
			Fossil skull discovered by Richard Leakey in 1972
				Brain volume much larger than australopithecines
				1.6 million years old, clearly human in characteristics
			Eventually became extinct

		Out of Africa:  Homo erectus
			Many fossils with same characteristics verify H. erectus as true human
			Java man
				Dubois found fossils in 1891
					Long, straight legs, excellent walker
					Very large, 1,000 cubic centimeter brain
					Judged to be 500,000 years old
				Now accepted as clearly human
			Peking man
				Skulls discovered in China in 1920's	fig 23.11
				Also found crude tools and ashes from campfires

		The Success of Homo erectus
			Include Java man and Peking man
			Comparison to H. habilis
				Taller, larger brain, walked erect
				Skull has prominent brow ridges, rounded jaw
				Shape of skull interior suggest capability of speech
			Older fossil found in Africa in 1976, supports African origins
				1.5 million years old
				Spread through Africa, migrated to Asia and Europe within 1 million years
			Developed social structure
				Lived in tribes of 20 to 50 individuals
				Inhabited caves, built crude, wooden shelters
				Hunted and butchered large animals, cooked with fire
			Species survived for over 1 million years
				Disappeared in Africa and Europe 500,000 years ago
				Lasted longer in Asia, until 250,000 years ago
			H. erectus differs from modern humans in brain size

MODERN HUMANS

		Homo sapiens
			Species first appeared 500,000 years ago
			Has persisted only half as long as H. erectus thus far

		Out of Africa - Again
			Controversy regarding evolution of human races
				Some support races evolved independently in various areas
				Mitochondrial DNA supports that all races descended from one ancestor in Africa
					DNA in mitochondria transmitted only by females
					Trace versions of the mitochondrial gene back through history
					Greatest number of mutations should occur in oldest DNA
					Greatest number of mutations in modern Africans
					Thus oldest humans originated in Africa	fig 23.12
			H. sapiens evolved from H. erectus in Africa and remigrated to rest of world	fig 23.13
			Neanderthal man
				H. sapiens fossils found in Europe in 1856
				Short, stocky, powerfully built individuals
				Massive skulls, heavy bony brow ridges
				Made diverse tools, cared for sick and injured
				Social and psychological characteristics of modern humans
				Common by 70, 000 years ago in Europe and Asia
			Cro-Magnon man
				First appeared in Europe 34,000 years ago
				Coexisted with and eventually replaced Neanderthals 40,000 years ago
				Used more sophisticated tools
				Had more complex social organization
				May have been first humans with fully modern language capabilities
				Responsible for elaborate cave paintings of herd animals	fig 23.14
			Modern humans spread into North America via Siberia 13,000 years ago

		Homo sapiens Are Unique


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