Humans as Primates Objectives Describe primates and their
Humans as Primates
Objectives Describe primates and their evolution. Describe the major anatomical features that define humans as primates. Outline the trends illustrated by the fossils of early man.
Primate evolution Therapsids were the reptilian ancestors of mammals. Eozotrodon was an early mammal 200 mya. The 3 mammal lines present today Therapsid Eozotrodon, an insectivore
Primate evolution Origin in Asia ~85 mya? Migration to Africa as Pangaea broke up. Millions of years ago
Characteristics of primates As mammals, all species have fur and produce milk. Primates have hands and feet adapted for grasping. They have relatively large brains and short jaws. They have flat nails, not narrow claws. They have well-developed parental care complex social behavior. and
Characteristics of primates The earliest primates were probably tree dwellers. Opposable thumb (toe) for hanging on tree branches. The overlapping (binocular) fields of vision of the two eyes enhance depth perception – an advantage when jumping from branch to branch.
Characteristics of primates Two main groups of primates: Prosimians resemble early tree-dwelling primates. Lemurs of Madagascar and the lorises, pottos, tarsiers of tropical Africa and southern Asia. Nocturnal species (large eyes, black/white vision). and
Characteristics of primates Two main groups of primates: Anthropoids (of human likeness) Monkeys, apes (gibbons, orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos), & humans. Apes have no tails, unlike monkeys. Day-active (smaller eyes with color vision).
Human evolution Humans & apes share all but the last 5 million years of evolution. Hominoid refers to great apes and humans collectively. Hominid means “man-like” - primate that walks on two feet (no opposable toe). There are 2 main groups of hominids: the australopithecines, which came first and are all extinct, and members of the genus Homo, with all species extinct now except one: H. sapiens.
Human evolution Evolutionary trends Bipedalism vs. arboreal (life in trees). Increased stature: early Australopithecenes were sized; modern humans are much larger. Cranial capacity: three-fold increase in brain size Dietary specialization: tooth size has shrunk, incisors are less obvious (not for defense). More parental care: humans are born helpless. chimp- and
Human evolution Evolutionary trends Bipedalism vs. arboreal (life in trees). Man’s body is centered over the pelvis. Femur attachment altered. Arms are shorter. No knuckle walking
Human evolution Evolutionary trends Bipedalism vs. arboreal (life in trees). Climate change made forests disappear. Weaker “apes” were pushed out of remaining trees. On the ground, humans needed to see over the grass to spot predators (lions) before they saw them. The Serengeti Plain of Africa where humans evolved
Human evolution Evolutionary trends Increased stature: early Australopithecenes were sized; modern humans are much larger. Chimp Australopithecus Human chimp-
Human evolution Evolutionary trends Cranial capacity: a three-fold inbrain crease in size Upright stance narrows birth canal, so a head can birthing difficult. large make more Face is more vertical as time passes.
Human evolution Evolutionary trends Dietary specialization: tooth size has shrunk, incisors are less obvious (not for defense). Diet switched from plant to cooked animal food. Requires less grinding of food Also, jaw is more V-shaped, less U-shaped and
Human evolution Evolutionary trends More parental care: humans are born helpless. Length of care increases with brain size. Humans require care through early teen years.
Physical vs. cultural evolution The human state of consciousness
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