The Appearance and Global Dispersal of Modern Humans Flashcards
Genetic data point to an ___ origin of all modern humans living today
African
The rich genetic diversity in Africa is because Africa . . .
Holds the source populations for a series of dispersal events
The skull of Homo sapiens is characterized by:
Reduced size of jaws and teeth
- dental crowding
- M3 reduction
Presence of a chin (mental eminence) in many populations
Brain size large relative to body size
- 1350-1500 cc
Small face is retracted below the braincase
not much brow ridge
high forehead
canine fossa
Rounded parietal (greatest cranial width at mid-parietal)
Rounded occipital
Anatomically modern Homo sapiens used MSA lithic technology
African Middle Stone Age is much like the Middle Paleolithic in Europe
The African MSA is distinguished by:
- composite flake tools from prepared cores
- absence of large handaxes
- soft flaking techniques
- flints and obsidian
Distinguishing Hominin features ONLY in BEHAVIORALLY modern hominins
- Global distribution
- Large population size at high density
- Reliance on material culture
- Genetic Uniformity
- Cognition
- Longer gestation, later age at maturity
Behaviorally modern humans- LSA (Late Stone Age)
- Fishing
- Tailored clothing
- Art
- Jewelry
- General decoupling of change in anatomy and material culture
- Projectile weapons (increased range of potential prey)
Behaviorally modern humans-LSA (Late Stone Age)
Africa: Later Stone Age (LSA)
Europe: Upper Paleolithic
- blades
- burins and scrapers
- bone tools
How were LSA sites different?
- larger denser populations
- different kinds of tools (bone tools; blades and bladelets)
- projectile weaponry
- fishing and marine foods
- improvement in extracting resources from environment
- aesthetics and abstract representation (art, jewelry, tailored clothing)
- regionally distinct cultural materials
The earliest Homo sapiens outside of Africa
Technically, Skuhl and Qafzeh are outside of Africa
- but these are anatomically modern humans that are associated with MSA technology
Blombos cave is a MSA site in South Africa that has a bit more than a typical MSA site
engraved ochre
- rock art
Shells with holes
- jewelry
Exploitation of marine food sources
- shellfish
- tortoise
- birds
The earliest Homo sapiens outside of Africa were behaviorally modern
- shortly after 50 ka
- Nacho Kiro Cave, Bulgaria contains the oldest European behaviorally modern human currently known
- dated to more than 45 ka (just at the old limit of radiocarbon dating)
- a human tooth and some bone fragments (identified using the ZooMS paleoproteomics methods)
- cultural materials (tools, bone artifacts and pendants)
- modern human mtDNA
- Peștera cu Oase, România
- dated to ca 42-37 ka
Cro-Magnon is the name of a site in France that produced . . .
a famous fossil cranium
Europe
- Classic Neanderthal morphology evolving
- Middle Paleolithic lithic technology
Africa
- “Anatomically modern” humans evolving
- Technological transition Middle Stone Age (MSA) to Later Stone Age (LSA)
Asia
- Denisovans
- Still H. erectus (differentiation into Javan ad Chinese forms)
- persist until very late
- less technological advancement
mtDNA (mitochondrial)
- only in mothers
- All neanderthals had different (not-Homo sapiens) mtDNA sequences
- no Neanderthal female/H. sapiens male admixture
- very small admixture, lost in living H. sapiens
Nuclear genome, 2010
- both females and male
- a small amount of admixture
- “Neanderthal alleles” in European and Asian populations, but not in African populations)
- genomes 99.7% similar
aDNA was extracted from Oase in 2015
- 5-11% Neanderthal nuclear DNA
- 12th chromosome was 50% Neanderthal
- Suggests that this individual had a Neanderthal ancestor as recently as four-to-six generations back in his family tree
“Lissoirs”
Tools of Neanderthals
Cave art in Spain was recently dated to . . .
more than 60 ka
Expansion to Asia and Australia
ca. 50-45 ka
- archaeological sites date to more than 50 ka
- Lake Mungo 30 ka or more
- molecular divergence of native Australians at 50 ka
Could have walked most of the way
- had to cross at least 55 km open sea
Expansion to the Americas
- occupation of Siberia 40 ka
- Alaska shortly after that
- Into southern Northern America (ca. 13 ka)
- Ice-free corridor