35
Earliest Hominins

Earliest Hominins

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Earliest Hominins. Hominin Phylogeny. Genus Homo. Archaic. Primitive. Mosaic Evolution. Modern human characteristics Appeared at different times Evolved at different rates Extinct hominids show a mosaic of derived and ancestral characteristics. Hominin Evolutionary Sequences. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Earliest  Hominins

Earliest Hominins

Page 2: Earliest  Hominins

Hominin Phylogeny

Primitive

Archaic

Genus Homo

Page 3: Earliest  Hominins

Mosaic Evolution Modern human characteristics

› Appeared at different times › Evolved at different rates

Extinct hominids show a mosaic of derived and ancestral characteristics

Page 4: Earliest  Hominins

Hominin Evolutionary Sequences

Locomotion› Shift from inefficient to more efficient bipedality ca. 2

mya

Dentition› Enamel thickening ca. 4 mya› Gradual reduction of anterior dentition 4.5 mya to

present› Gradual reduction of posterior dentition ca. 2.5 mya to

present

Encephalization› Limited encephalization from 4 mya to 2.5 mya› Marked encephalization from 2.5 mya to ca. 150 kya

Page 5: Earliest  Hominins

Bipedality

Page 6: Earliest  Hominins
Page 7: Earliest  Hominins
Page 8: Earliest  Hominins

Skeletal Indicators of Bipedality Pelvis

Distribution of body mass

Relative limb-length

Position of foramen magnum

Lumbar vertebrae

Foot

Page 9: Earliest  Hominins

Primate Taxonomy (DNA-based)

Page 10: Earliest  Hominins
Page 11: Earliest  Hominins

Dentition

Page 12: Earliest  Hominins

Dentition comparison

Page 13: Earliest  Hominins

Early Hominin Molar Size

Page 14: Earliest  Hominins

Primitive Hominins

Page 15: Earliest  Hominins

Sahelanthropus tchadensis

Age – estimated to be between 6 and 7 mya Fossil remains

› Nearly complete cranium › Several fragmentary mandibles› Isolated teeth

Cranial capacity – 320-380 cc Classification uncertain – several possibilities Position of foramen magnum suggests non-

bipedal

Page 16: Earliest  Hominins

Sahelanthropus tchadensis Chimp-sized brain Hominin-like brow

ridges Canine wear

pattern not ape-like

Thick hominin-like mandible

Page 17: Earliest  Hominins
Page 18: Earliest  Hominins

Orrorin tugenensis

Age ca. 6mya Fossils remains – mandibles, femur,

humerus, large molars, small canines› Femur suggests bipedality› Humerus suggests tree-climbing skills (but

not brachiation)› Long bones suggest chimpanzee size› Teeth resemble later hominids

Page 19: Earliest  Hominins

Orrorin tugenensis Femur

Page 20: Earliest  Hominins

Ardipithecus ramidus

Page 21: Earliest  Hominins
Page 22: Earliest  Hominins
Page 23: Earliest  Hominins

Archaic Hominins

Page 24: Earliest  Hominins

24

GRACILE & ROBUST AUSTRALOPITHECINES

“Gracile”(afarensis)

“Robust” (aethiopicus)

Page 25: Earliest  Hominins

Australopithecus africanus

STS 5

Page 26: Earliest  Hominins

Paranthropus boisei (OH 5)

Page 27: Earliest  Hominins

“gracile” vs “robust” archaic hominins

Au. africanus P. boisei

Page 28: Earliest  Hominins

Australopithecus ghari

Age ca. 2.5 mya› Later Australopithecine

Limbs suggest bipedality Incipient megadontia

Found with stone tools and butchered animal remains

Page 29: Earliest  Hominins

Australopithecus ghari

Page 30: Earliest  Hominins

The Genus Homo

Page 31: Earliest  Hominins

Homo [?] habilis

Page 32: Earliest  Hominins

Cranial Comparisons

Page 33: Earliest  Hominins

Dmanisi Homo erectus

Page 34: Earliest  Hominins

Homo ergaster KNM-ER 3733

Page 35: Earliest  Hominins

Comparison of Later Forms of Homo