History 8 Human Origins Vocabulary
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Vocabulary
1.australopithecines- Australopithecines were a genus of early hominoids that lived from about 5.6 MYA to about 1 million BC. [1] About 6 MYA, the jungles that covered Africa began to dry out, and food supply became low. In this situation, the human group was the least susceptible to survive, so they were forced out into the grassland. These early hominoids were forced to adapt. Examples: opposable thumbs and bipedal stance needed for throwing well, hip joints needed to change so that legs aligned with the backbone. Ankles became stronger and less flexible. Big toe became in alignment with the other toes, allowing it to take on the weight of the body. Also, the hole where the spinal column connects to the brain moved the the center of the skull, allowing the spinal cord to run perpendicular to the ground. End the end, the Australopithecines that did not adapt quick enough became extinct about 1 million B.C.[2]
-Emily Pedrick
sources
- ↑ http://www.iscid.org/encyclopedia/Australopithecines viewed 9/15/2012 ©2005
- ↑ CF Manual pages 20-21 viewed 9/15/2012
- ↑ http://zinjanthropus.wordpress.com/2008/11/10/intro-to-australopiths/ Viewed 9/14/2012, ©2008
2. fossils -Arisa Sadeghpour
According to Roy Sheperd, a fossil is "the physical evidence of former life from a period of time prior to recorded human history." Fossils can be used to interpret the past, and are a key role in our understanding of the past today. For example, the fossils of the first bipeds show many different changes and characteristics from the bipeds' ancestors. Changes in anatomical structure, like skeletal, muscular, and neural changes to increase natural defenses, have allowed us to understand more about the distant past.
Sources: CF Manual page 20 What is a Fossil? Discorvering Fossils, Sept 13, 2012, http://www.discoveringfossils.co.uk/whatisafossil.htm,
3.bipeds/bipedalism- In a biped, the spinal cord runs perpendicular to the jaw and the ground. If bipedals did not have this shift, than they would not be able to hold there heads upright, and their vision would be limited. Bipedalism or only moving with two limbs, is less efficient than moving on all four limbs, which is way that apes, or quadrupeds move. Quadrupeds have the ability to move faster than bipedals, because quadrupeds have the advantage of running on four legs, which makes bipedalism less efficient.
Sources:
1. CF Manual page 21
-Sam Schneider
4. foramen magnum
5. cranium
6. savanna
The savanna is grassland scattered with shrubs and isolated trees. Savannas are found in warm to hot climates where the average rainfall is about 30-40 inches per year. They cover almost half the surface of Africa, as well as large portions of Australia, South America, and India. The soil of the savanna is porous, with rapid drainage of water. It has a thin layer of organic soil, called humus, which provides vegetation and nutrients. Savannas both have wet and dry seasons. The beginning of the dry season is indicated in October through series of violent thunderstorms and drying winds. Fires are prevalent throughout this season. In, March thunder storms drive again, this time signifying the start of the rainy season. [1] The savanna is the home to many different animals, including the African elephant, cheetah, gazelle, giraffe, and hippopotamus. [2] The savanna is an important biome for many animals and the ecosystem.
Savanna in the Samburu Game Preserve, Kenya.
Sources:
- 4. [1]
- 5. [2]
- 6. [3]
By Jeffrey Wang
7. hominid
The immediate ancestors of humans were members of the genus Australopithecus. The australopithecines were intermediate between apes and people. Both australopithecines and humans are biologically similar enough to be classified as members of the same biological tribe, the Hominini. All people, past and present, along with the australopithecines are hominins. We share in common the fact that we evolved from the same ape ancestors in Africa but that both genera are habitually bipedal, or two-footed, upright walkers. Although the hominid fossil record is far from complete, and the evidence is often fragmentary, there is enough to give a good outline of the evolutionary history of humans. The earliest australopithecines very likely did not evolve until 5 million years ago or shortly thereafter in East Africa. By about 4.2 million years ago, unquestionable australopithecines were present. By 3 million years ago, they were common in both East and South Africa. As the australopithecines evolved, they exploited more types of environments. Their early proto-hominin ancestors had been predominantly tropical forest animals. However, African forests were progressively giving way to savannas. The australopithecines took advantage of these new conditions. In the more open environments, bipedalism would very likely have been an advantage. Yet, they still needed to evolve to survive in the new environment. Hominids probably used their hands in aggressive displays, such as hurling stones or sticks at predators. An accurate throw requires an opposable thumb grip. Their hip joints were modified so that their legs could align with their backbone, and their knees had grown closer together in order to bear the total body weight more efficiently. Because of standing on two legs, hominids’ brains quadrupled during their lifetimes. The soles of their feet had grown arched rather than flat. By 2.5 million years ago, there were at least 2 evolutionary lines of hominins descended from the early australopithecines. One line apparently was adapted primarily to the food resources in lake margin grassland environments and had an omnivorous diet that increasingly included meat. Meat in their diet provided them with an opportunity for social activity. Among them were our early human ancestors who started to make stone tools by this time. The other line seems to have lived more in mixed grassland and woodland environments, like the earlier australopithecines, and was primarily vegetarian. This second, more conservative line of early hominins died out by 1 million years ago or shortly before then.
[[4]]
Sophie Worscheh
Link: http://anthro.palomar.edu/hominid/australo_1.htm Link: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/species.html: History Manuel Picture: http://www.amnh.org/education/resources/rfl/web/hhoguide/family-tree.html
8. Oldowan Tools
9. herbivores
10. marrow
11. sweating
12. panting
13. browridge
14. Acheulean tools
15. bifacial
16. interglacials
17. Sunda
18. Beringia
19. loess
20. mammoths
21. prepared core
22. permafrost
23. burial
24. grave goods
25. archaic
26. frontal lobe
27. Shamanism
28. micro-flints
29. brunishers
30. burins
31. blade and burin
32. annealing
33. composite tools
34. hafting
35. migrational
36. nomadic
37. atlatl
38. egalitarian
39. knapper
40. microlith
41. diffusionist
42. ochre
43.dentalium
44. middens
45. horticulture
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