Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Species names

A

always comprised of (at least) two words: genus (capitalized) and species
(not capitalized); both words in italics e.g. Homo sapiens

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2
Q

Basal hominins

A

Sahelanthropus tchadensis
Orrorin tugenensis
Ardipithecus kadabba
Ardipithecus ramidus

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3
Q

Archaic hominins

A

Australopithecus afarensis
Australopithecus anamensis
Australopithecus bahrelghazali
Australopithecus garhi
Australopithecus sediba

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4
Q

Megadont archaic hominins

A

Paranthropus aethiopicus
Paranthropus robustus
Paranthropus boisei

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5
Q

Transitional hominins

A

Homo rudolfensis
Homo habilis

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6
Q

Pre-modern hominins

A

Homo georgicus
Homo ergaster
Homo erectus
Homo antecessor
Homo heidelbergensis
Homo naledi
Homo neanderthalensis
Denisovans

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7
Q

Sahelanthropus tchadensis facts

A

*7-6mya
* Found (unexpectedly) in Chad, central Africa
*Six specimens, including a complete cranium (Toumai)
and fragmentary lower jaws
* Dated by biostratigraphy: associated with fauna dated
*mixture of derived and primitive features

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8
Q

Orrorin tugenensis facts

A

*6.6-5.7mya
* Found in the Tugen hills in
Kenya, East Africa in 2000
* Found in sediments dated to
c6mya
* Femur is of a young adult
* Carnivore marks on femur
* Femur suggests bipedalism
* But humerus suggests some
retained arboreality!
* Ape or hominin? Confusing
teeth…

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9
Q

What are the two Ardipithecus species

A
  • Ardipithecus ramidus from 4.4mya
  • Ardipithecus kadabba 5.8-5.2mya
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10
Q

Sahelanthropus tchadensis cranium

A
  • Long, narrow basicranium
  • Small, ape-size braincase (estimated at 320-380cm3)
  • Small, posteriorly located sagittal crest
  • Large nuchal crest
  • Flat and relatively long nuchal plane with large external occipital crest
  • Triangular occipital shape
  • Foramen magnum longer than wide, unlike rounded shape of Pan
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11
Q

Sahelanthropus tchadensis face

A
  • Face relatively flat (similar to later hominins)
  • Upper part of face wide relative to narrow, short lower face
  • Orbits/eye sockets widely set separated by wide interorbital pillar
  • Continuous, thick supraorbital torus/browridge (sexual selection?) Similar to later hominins
  • Flat frontal squama with no supratoral sulcus but marked postorbital constriction more
    pronounced than Pan or Gorilla)
  • Rear of skull rather ape-like
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12
Q

Sahelanthropus tchadensis jaw/teeth

A
  • Canines relatively small, wear at tips
  • large canine fossa
  • Small, narrow u-shaped dental arch
  • Enamel thickness intermediate between Pan and Australopithecus
  • Small cheek teeth – similar to Ardipithecus and australopithecus
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13
Q

Sahelanthropus tchadensis
controversy

A

Dating:
* The skull was a surface find, out of context: association with dated sediments
unclear
* May have been exposed for some time – found in a grave oriented towards
Mecca?!
* Possibly previously found and re-buried by local pastoral peoples?

Hominin….
* Or Panin (early member of the chimpanzee lineage?)
* Or Gorilline (early member of Gorilla lineage?)

Bipedal?!
* Based on position of foramen magnum under the skull
* Original publication didn’t mention limb bones but a femur was apparently
found and only formally described in 2020 (18 years later?)
* Femur is thought to be ‘inconsistent with habitual bipedalism’

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14
Q

Orrorin tugenensis: bipedal?

A

Femur: has a few ape-like
features but many more derived features:
* Elongated femoral neck
* Anteriorly twisted head (vs
posterior twist in
australopithecines)
* Thicker cortex bone in the upper
part
* Well-developed gluteal
tuberosity (gluteus muscle
attachment area)
* Shallow superior notch
* Antero-posteriorly compressed
femoral neck

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15
Q

Ardipithecus kadabba facts

A
  • c.5.8 – 5.2mya
  • Central Awash complex and the Western margin,
    Middle Awash, Ethiopia
  • Very little known
  • About the size of a chimpanzee – more apelike than A.
    ramidus
  • Bones from perhaps 5 individuals including from hand,
    arm and clavicle(collar bone)
  • Orientation and shape of toe bone suggests a grasping
    foot but also bipedal characteristics
  • Dimensions of arm suggest similar body size to
    australopithecines
  • Forested environment? Mixed woodland, grassland
    with springs, swamps and small lakes
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16
Q

Ardipithecus kadabba teeth

A

*Canines quite large and projecting
*Molar enamel thinner than chimpanzees but thicker than
later hominins
*Ate fruit and soft leaves

17
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus facts

A
  • C 4.5 – 4.3mya
  • Dated via absolute dating of volcanic rocks above and below the finds
  • Aramis, Middle Awash, Ethiopia
  • At least 17 individuals, mainly teeth but including …
  • A remarkably complete skeleton (c45% preserved?)
  • Weighed c 50kg, height c 3ft 11in/1.2m
18
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus skull

A

*Poorly preserved but quite similar to Sahelanthropus
* Quite ape-like but with slightly flatter face
* Brain size 300-370cm3
* cf. chimpanzee 282-500cm3

19
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus teeth

A
  • Reduced canines and little sexual dimorphism – implications for social
    organization?
  • Relatively thin enamel (modern feature)
  • Small molars and premolars; powerful front biting and gripping (leaf stripping)
  • Varied diet, similar to a modern chimpanzee?
20
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus feet

A
  • Divergent big toe for good grasping (more apelike)
  • Supportive mid-foot and heel to allow better
    ‘pushing off’ while walking bipedally
21
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus pelvis

A
  • Upper part of pelvis is more human-like, lower
    part more ape-like
22
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus hands

A
  • Long, ape-like fingers
  • But palm is short and robust
  • Wrist is flexible
  • NOT adapted to knuckle-walking or brachiation
    but some arboreality
23
Q

Ardipithecus ramidus limb proportion

A
  • Relatively long arms
  • More like old world monkeys, not great apes!