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study of fossil records to understand the process and products of the human evolution |
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interconnections between human biological variation, physiology, anatomy, disease, and demography |
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What is the goal of anthropology? |
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Advanced understanding of humanity through a comparative approach:
Human culture
HUman biology
Human vs. non human primate |
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looking at all aspects of human to understand any part
- Drawing on sub-disciplines to answer questions
- Drawing from other fields ( genetics, biology) |
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-Compare across cultures/individuals/ households
-Find similarities and differences |
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Tendancy to thinks ones own ways (culture and norms, behaviors) are normal and natural, and that others are inferior |
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The great chain of being
(everything is how it should be) |
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principles of stratigraphy
layers of the earth |
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forms the basis of natural selection |
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not all born survive
competition for survival |
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Mechanisms of change depend on.. |
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natural selection
variations in population
Reproductive success (RS) varies based on fit |
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Change in population occurs due to.... |
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differential reproductive success of individuals |
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prokaryote: one cell
Eukaryote: many cells |
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Somatic: body cells, and diploid
Gamete: reproductive cells, ova-female, sperm-male, haploid cells |
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In the structure of DNA there are two types of___ |
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sugar phosphate backbone paired with one of four nitrogen bases
Adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine
A=T
G=C |
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Contains genes and non-coding regions
2 types: nuclear, and mitochondrial |
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-in the nucleus
-complex structures that house supercoiled DNA
-Occur in the hemoglobin:
A. 1 from each parent
B. genetic info influences same trait
C. not genetically identical
- two types: autosomes, and sex chromosomes
A. XX female
B. XY Male |
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Proteins, the building blocks of organic life
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structural, regulatory, transport, catalytic |
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the building blocks of proteins |
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Proteins differ according to... |
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number and sequence of amino acids
20 possible amino acids
64 possible 3 letter combinations |
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process by which DNA copies itself |
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process by which the neucleotide message is taken from a gene, transcribed and translated into a protein |
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process by which a 3- neucleotide sequence causes enzymes to start or stop a specific activity |
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Protein synthesis
(four steps) |
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Definition
1.Genetic code is copied (transcripted) in nucleus
2. Transcriped code is transported moved to cytoplasm
3. Translated into acids
4. Folded into proteins |
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site for converting genetic message into proteins |
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carries genetic message from nucleus to ribosome |
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binds to one specific AA and carries it to ribosome |
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RNA differs from DNA because... |
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1. Usually single stranded
2. Contains different type of sugar
3. Base Uracil (U) as a substitue thymine (T)
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Protein Synthesis Transcription |
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The process of reading the meaning of the message from DNA
Like replication but only some portion of DNA is copied from formation of mRNA |
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Protein Synthesis: translation |
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Definition
1.conversion of mRNA into protein
2. mRNA is read 3 base paris (1 codon) at a time
3. tRNA's arrive at ribosomes carrying specific AA's
4. tRNA matches up with mRNA
5. Forms a protein |
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Definition
gamete production
results in 4 non identical haploid gamete cells |
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segment of DNA that contains the sequence for a protein |
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A mutation occurs when.... |
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the sequence of bases in a gene is altered
1. may interfere with an organisms ability to produce proteins
2. May lead to new variety within the species |
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Point mutation can be good and bad because.. |
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Definition
1. one letter off ( sickle cell anemia)
2. causes for slight advanced hemoglobin: super oxygenated, perform better |
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Form of a gene, homologous chromosomes, one from male and one from female. When both chromosomes come together the allele determines whether it is dominant or recessive |
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the state of having the same allele at both loci |
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the state of having different alleles at both loci |
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Principle of Independent Assortment |
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Inheritance of one trait does not affect the inheritance of other traits |
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two alleles for any given gene are inherited; one from each parent. During gamete production one one of two alleles will be present in ovum or sperm |
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1. influcenced by more than one genetic locus
2. influenced by environment
3. many phenotypes can be distinguished (characteristics) |
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Evolutionary Change occurs in populations in four ways: |
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Definition
1. Natural Selection
2. Mutation
3. Gene Flow
4. Genetic Drift |
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From a modern genetic perspective evolution is: |
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Definition
a change in allele frequency from one generation o the next |
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random changes in allele frequencies
directly related to population size
small population = big effect
Founder and bottleneck effect |
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co opted trait
birds feathers where made for warmth. Didnt evolve for flight. So its an exaptation because there was a shift in how the trait was used |
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stabilizing
disruptive
directional |
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process by which a new speciation arise from perviously existing species |
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the same species gradually changes |
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separation and isolation of populations that became isolated and cannot reproduce anymore |
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occurs in species that are closely related
similar characteristics due to recent common ancestory |
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characteristics similar due to common environmental pressures |
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cultural and biological variations are inherited in the same way |
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"race improvement" through forced sterilization of members of some groups and encouraged reproduction among others |
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Skin color is influenced by three substances |
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Definition
1. hemoglobin: when its carrying oxygen gives a reddish color to skin
2. Carotene: plant pigment in body that synthesizes to Vitamin A, yellowish color
3. Melanin: absorbs ultraviolet radiation preventing damage to DNA
A. Phelomelanin: red to yellow (lighter skin)
B. Eumelanin: red to black (darker skin) |
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pigment producing cells
produces melanin |
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gradual change in the frequency of a trait |
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Clinical Distributions reflect: |
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natural selection
gene flow
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