Chapter 34: Humans

Section 2: Hominid Evolution: Human Ancestors and Relatives

Hominid Evolution: Human Ancestors and Relatives

Between 4 and 9 million years ago, the hominoid line in Africa gave rise to a small group of species that we now recognize as our ______

o______

oNot yet human but showed several evolutionary trends that distinguish them from other hominoids

What Are Hominids?

Hominids were ______that ate both meat and vegetable foods, as modern humans do

As time progressed, the ______, ______, and ______of these animals changed shape in ways that made it easier for them to walk upright on two legs

o______

Because our ancestors could walk erect, their hands were free to use tools more often

At the same time, the thumb of the hominid hand became more and more independent from the other fingers

The evolution of an ______enabled ancient hominids to grasp objects and use them as tools more effectively than other primates

Hominids also displayed a remarkable increase in ______

o______, our closest relatives among the apes, have a brain size of about 280 – 450 cubic centimeters

oThe brain of Homo sapiens, on the other hand, ranges in size from 1200 – 1600 cubic centimeters

Enormously expanded human ______
______

How Did Hominids Evolve?

Much of our most recent evidence for hominid evolution comes from a small area in eastern Africa between ______

There, several researchers have found fossils of several species of hominids dating from about 4 million to about 1.5 million years ago

Australopithecus: The First Hominids

The first hominid fossil to be found, a nearly complete skull of a young child, was discovered in South Africa in 1924

o______

______

Because the skull belonged to a child, it could not be used to determine how adults of the species looked

But 12 years later, investigators in Africa found fossils of adult australopithecines

oOne of the fossils was part of a hip bone, indicating that Australopithecus ______

An essential step in the evolution of our species from an apelike ancestor

Since those discoveries, researchers have found many more complete hominid fossils

In 1974, a team led by Donald Johanson and Tim White found a nearly complete Australopithecus skeleton

From the shape of the pelvic bone, it was clear that this skeleton had been that of a ______

o______

In 1977, anthropologist Mary Leakey made another discovery: a set of fossil ______

From the size of the prints, they were probably a parent and an offspring

oClear evidence that the animals that made the footprints ______, as humans do

No stone tools have been found among Australopithecus fossils, but they may have used ______as tools in a way similar to that of chimpanzees today

Most current studies suggest that there were at least four species of Australopithecus

o______

o______

o______

o______

These species all lived between 4 and 1.5 million years ago, walked upright, and had much smaller brains than present-day humans

Homo habilis

For a while, australopithecines were the only known links in the chain of human evolution

Then anthropologist Richard Leakey found another hominid fossil with a smaller ______and significantly larger ______than the australopithecines

Leakey felt this species was similar enough to humans to be placed in our own genus, Homo

Fossils of this hominid were found along with tools made of ______

o______

______

Near one of these fossil finds is the oldest human settlement yet discovered (Kenya)

The settlement was found at a level in the rock dated at 1.9 million years ago

The main site is a circular stone structure about 4 meters in diameter

Inside, the floor is littered with animal bones and stone tools

Homo erectus

Within a few hundred thousand years Homo habilis disappeared and was replaced by a larger brained species called ______

By 1 million years ago, this species had spread over most of the Old World, from Africa to Europe to Asia

Homo erectus was an excellent ______

oCarefully chipped and balanced hand axes have been found with Homo erectus fossils throughout the world

In caves in China that are at least half a million years old, charred animal bones have been found around fire sites

oMust have used ______

Homo sapiens

About 500,000 years ago, the first hominids assigned to our own species appeared

These hominids, often called ______, would not be easily recognizable as modern humans

Little is known about this species

Around 150,000 years ago, a new hominid walked on Earth

First discovered in the Neander valley in Germany, this species was called ______, or Homo neanderthalensis

Now, based on more complete fossil evidence, Neanderthals have been placed in our own species and are called Homo sapiens neanderthalensis

Neanderthal man could probably walk down a busy street today and not be noticed

These early members of our species were successful for a time and became common throughout ______by 70,000 years ago

The first hominids truly identical to modern humans appeared in locations scattered throughout the Old World roughly 100,000 years ago

These large-brained people, called ______, were more slender than the Neanderthals and had a more complex culture

They made a wide variety of stone and bone tools, including spear points, knives, chisels, and needles

Fossils of Cro-magnon are now classified as modern humans, ______

Most paleontologists interpret the dates of Cro-Magnon fossils found throughout the world as indicating that modern humans originated in ______and from there spread out over the rest of the world

However and wherever Cro-Magnons originated, there is ample fossil evidence that they lived side by side with Neanderthals in several locations for some time

Then, around 30,000 years ago, the Neanderthals ______

Some scientists believe that Cro-Magnons interbred with Neanderthals, ______

Others believe that the more intelligent newcomers killed off their older relatives

In either case, only Homo sapiens sapiens remained to populate the rest of the world