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1.the probable hominins 2.Gracile australopiths--Australopithicus 3.Robust australopiths 4.Homo Habilis |
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o sehalanthropus tchadensis (7-6 myrs) o orrorin tugemensis (6-2) o ardipithecus kadabba o Ardipithecus ramidus |
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Gracile australopiths--Australopithicus |
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• A. anamensis • A. afarensis • A. africanus • A. sediba • A. barelgazali • Kenyapithecus platyops |
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• Paranthropus • Aethiopicus • Boisei • Robustus |
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• Erectus • Rudolfensis • Sapiens • Heidelburgensis • Neandethalensis |
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Major Sites of early hominins |
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• Eastern Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, ethipoia) • South Africa • One site in central Africa |
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• Big toe not inline • Discovered in Ethiopia • Thin tooth enamel a foramen magnum in line with bipedalism |
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• Found in Kenya near lake turkana • Very large thick canines. • Parabolic arch • Knocked knee creatures (standing on two legs) • Flexability in elbow..so prolly chilled in trees occasionally |
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• Found in Ethiopia and Tanzania • 400 cc in brain size. Just a little bigger than chimps. • Prognathic jaw which means its less flat. • Parabolic arch. • Reduced canines • Post cranial Long arms, short legs Valgus knees (definitely bipedal at some point) Long and curved from swinging in trees |
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• Larger brain (450-500cc) • Forehead development-frontal cortex forming • Prognathic face is reducing. • Canines are heavily reduced. • Big jaws • Afarensis looking post cranial body • Shape of hip is just like afarensis |
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• Flat face • Possible forehead • Broad shorter skull-possible homo? • Found in Malapa • Small teeth • Flat thickly enameled • Arms are long, tiny hands • Two legged action |
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evolution of characters at various rates both within and between species. Hominid evolution: the early evolution of bipedalism in Australopithecines, and its modification of the pelvic girdle took place well before there was any significant change in the skull, or brain size. |
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Ethiopia • Found in same temporal deposits where there are some of the earliest stone tools • 450 cc cranial capacity • had fairly large molars with thick enamel • femur is fairly long compared to humerus. Arms seems more ape like, which is weird cause humans don’t have that |
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Kenya • got broad flat face. • Small brain • Thick enamel but the cheek teeth are small |
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o Primitive • Several afarensis like traits • Smallish brain- 400-450cc • Prognathic snout (snout pulls forward) • Compound temporonucal crest neck muscles • Moderate sized incisors o Derived • Big sagittal crest • Dish shaped midface • Flaring zygomatic arches • Frontal trigon (above brow ridge) • Large molars • Thick mandible |
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• Shares with p. aethiopicus o Dish faced o Flaring zygomatic o Sagittal crest o Large flat molars (largest ever recovered) o Hyperrobust --megadont! o Ate whatever he wants • Small incisors • Othronathic • 530 cc brain size • No temporonucal crest |
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paranthropus robustus vs aus. africanus |
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• larger temporal fossa • shorter snout • sagittal crest (males only) • face is hafted • flatter forehead • flatter face • major differences are dietary |
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• not as robust as boziei • flaring zygomatic arches • frontal trigon • 530 cc brain • like boizei: orthonathic snout, small incisors, lack of compound temporonucal crest • very big molar teeth • tall jaw, meaning lots of power it can generate. |
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Pliocene hominid systematics |
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• over time more diversity occurs o possibly because less fossils. Haven’t been looking in earliest deposits. o Evolution could have just diversified over time. Starting with only just one. |
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