Name:

ANT 3514- Introduction to Biological Anthropology

Modern Humans

Lab 11, Week of 3/29/04

The focus of this lab concerns late archaic Homo sapiens and anatomically modern humans. Students will answer questions concerning archaic Homo sapiens (including the Neanderthals), and the origins of our species with regards to various interpretations of human evolution.

Station 1: Multi-regional vs. Out of Africa

(in class) Regional continuity, also known as Multi-regionalism, argues that modern humans evolved independently in different geographic locations. Rapid replacement, also known as Out of Africa, maintains that modern humans evolved more recently, in Africa, and spread out replacing all other hominin species. An intermediate of these two models is called the partial replacement model. Sketch these three models from the chart provided. Be sure to include the locations and species involved in each theory.

______

Multi-regionalism

______

Out of Africa

______

Partial Replacement Model

Station 2: Homo heidelbergensis and AMH

Archaic forms of Homo sapiens, often referred to as Homo heidelbergensis, first appear between 800,000-500,000 years ago. This covers a diverse group of skulls which have features of both Homo erectus and modern humans. There is no clear dividing line between late erectus and archaic H. sapiens, and many fossils between 500,000 and 200,000 years ago are difficult to classify as one or the other, however, it is clear that modern humans are direct descendents of these individuals.

At this station you will find:

·  Homo heidelbergensis (Steinheim)

·  2 early modern human crania: Zhoukoudian (Asia) & Dordogne (Cro-Magnon=Europe)

(in class) Compare and describe the following cranial features of these specimens.

Homo heidelbergensis / Zhoukoudian / Dordogne
Forehead
(sloping/ rounded)
Cranial vault
(rounded/ oval)
cranial breadth
(broad/ narrow)
Eye orbits
(shape and height)
Robusticity
(1-3 1= least, 3 =most)

(at home) Using your answers in the table, are the observed differences more supportive of the Multi-regional or Replacement model described in Station 1? How so?

Station 3: Early Modern Homo sapiens and Modern Homo sapiens

At this station you will find:

·  Skhul specimen (Israel, 115,000 years old)

·  A Neanderthal cranium

·  A modern human skull

List 3 features of the Skhul specimen which confirm that this individual belongs to H. sapiens?

What features might be viewed as more ancestral in the Skhul specimen?

Station 4: Femoral characteristics of Neanderthals and modern humans

At this station you will find:

·  the femur of a Neanderthal (Spy)

·  an early AMH femur (Skhul)

·  a contemporary human femur (Jimmy Hoffa)

Complete the following table comparing femoral characteristics between these specimens.

Neanderthal / AMH / Hoffa
Femoral Robusticity
(1-3: 1=least 3= most)
Head Diameter
(1-3: 1= narrow 3 = broad)

(at home) What accounts for the femoral differences between Neanderthal, Skhul, and Hoffa?

(at home) Who do you think was taller? Why?

Station 5: Trends in modern Homo sapiens

At this station you will find three modern human skulls from our collection. Fill in the table below by comparing the various cranial features of the skulls provided.

1 / 2 / 3
Orbits
(round/oval/rectangular)
Vault
(round/ oval/ tall/ short)
Zygomatics
(flared/ receding)
Nasal Aperature
(broad/ narrow)
Midface
(narrow/broad, long/short)


Discuss what might account for the observed intra-specific variation?

Homework: Use the readings from your packet to answer the following questions. If additional space is needed, continue your answer on the back of the page.

The Human Family Tree: 10 Adams and 18 Eves (pp.105-106)

What is the estimated time at which early humans began to radiate according to genetic data? From what continent did these early populations originate? Does this correspond with multi-regionalism or replacement?

Terms of Estrangement (pp. 113-116))

What is the bushel-basket scheme of race? Is it a biological reality? Why or why not.

Race without Color (pp. 118-124)

Name 2 possible explanations for the geographic variability of traits in humans.

Black, White, Other (pp. 124-128)

Name 3 biological factors that make a scientific definition of race difficult?

Extra Credit: (1point)

Which version of human evolution do you find most convincing and why?

Congratulations!!! You’ve completed the last lab of the semester.

5