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The Origin and Dispersal of Modern Humans

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Title: The Origin and Dispersal of Modern Humans


1
Chapter 14
  • The Origin and Dispersal of Modern Humans

2
Chapter Outline
  • Approaches to Understanding Modern Human Origins
  • The Earliest Discoveries of Modern Humans
  • Something New and Different
  • Technology and Art in the Upper Paleolithic
  • Summary of Upper Paleolithic Culture

3
Homo sapiens
  • Sometime, probably close to 200,000 years ago,
    the first modern Homo sapiens evolved in Africa.
  • Within 150,000 years or so, their descendants had
    spread across most of the Old World, even
    expanding as far as Australia.
  • All contemporary populationsmore than 6 billion
    living humansare placed within this species
    (and the same subspecies as well).

4
Questions About the Origin and Dispersal of
Modern Humans
  • When did modern humans first appear?
  • Where did the transition take place?
  • In one region or several?
  • What was the pace of evolutionary change?
  • How fast did the transition occur?
  • How did the dispersal of modern humans to other
    areas of the Old World take place?

5
Theories of Human Origins
  • Complete Replacement Model
  • Regional Continuity Model
  • Partial Replacement Model

6
Complete Replacement Model (Recent African
Evolution)
  • Developed by British paleoanthropologists
    Christopher Stringer and Peter Andrews.
  • Proposes anatomically modern populations arose in
    Africa in the last 200,000 years.
  • They migrated from Africa, completely replacing
    populations in Europe and Asia.
  • Does not account for the transition from archaic
    H. sapiens to modern H. sapiens anywhere except
    Africa.

7
Modern Humans From Africa and the Near East
8
Partial Replacement Model
  • Proposed by Günter Bräuer of the University of
    Hamburg.
  • Postulates the earliest dates for African modern
    Homo sapiens at over 100,000 y.a.

9
Partial Replacement Model
  • Initial dispersal of H. sapiens sapiens from
    South Africa was influenced by environmental
    conditions.
  • Moving into Eurasia, modern humans hybridized
    with resident groups, eventually replacing them.
  • The disappearance of archaic humans was due to
    hybridization and replacement.

10
Regional Continuity Model(Multiregional
Evolution)
  • Associated with paleoanthropologist Milford
    Wolpoff of the University of Michigan.
  • Populations in Europe, Asia, and Africa continued
    evolutionary development from archaic H. sapiens
    to anatomically modern humans.

11
The Regional Continuity Model(Multiregional
Evolution)
  • Question How did modern humans evolve in
    different continents and end up so physically and
    genetically similar?
  • Explanation
  • Due to gene flow between archaic populations,
    modern humans are not a separate species.
  • Earlier modern H. sapiens did not originate
    exclusively in Africa.

12
Question
  • Which of the following is not one of the
    hypotheses explaining the origins and dispersal
    of anatomically modern humans?
  • the partial replacement model
  • the regional continuity model
  • the regional replacement model
  • the complete replacement model

13
Answer c
  • The regional replacement model is not one of the
    hypotheses explaining the origins and dispersal
    of anatomically modern humans.

14
Question
  • Which hypotheses holds that anatomically modern
    populations arose in Africa within the last
    200,000 years, migrated out and replaced
    populations in Europe and Asia. They did not
    interbreed, they were a separate species.
  • the partial replacement model
  • the regional continuity model
  • the regional replacement model
  • the complete replacement model

15
Answer c
  • The Complete Replacement Model holds that
    anatomically modern populations arose in Africa
    within the last 200,000 years, migrated out and
    replaced populations in Europe and Asia. They did
    not interbreed, they were a separate species.

16
Question
  • The model also known as "Recent African
    Evolution" is based on the origin of modern
    humans
  • in Africa and their interbreeding with local
    African populations.
  • in Africa and their replacement of local
    populations in Europe and Asia.
  • in China and their relatively recent evolution in
    Africa.
  • simultaneously in Africa and China.

17
Answer b
  • The model also known as "Recent African
    Evolution" is based on the origin of modern
    humans in Africa and their replacement of local
    populations in Europe and Asia.

18
Early Homo sapiens Discoveries From Africa and
the Near East
19
Early Homo sapiens Discoveries From Africa and
the Near East
20
Omo I
  • Reconstructed skull of Omo I, an early modern
    human from Ethiopia, dated to 195 kya.
  • Note the clear presence of a chin.

21
Herto Cranium From Ethiopia
  • Herto cranium from Ethiopia, dated
    160,000154,000 ya.
  • This is the best- preserved early modern H.
    sapiens cranium yet found.

22
Mt. Carmel
  • Mt. Carmel, studded with caves, was home to H.
    sapiens sapiens at Skhul (and to Neandertals at
    Tabun and Kebara).

23
Specimens from Israel
  • (a) Skhul 5. (b) Qafzeh 6.
  • These specimens from Israel are thought to be
    representatives of early modern Homo sapiens.
  • The vault height, forehead, and lack of
    prognathism are modern traits.

24
Early Modern Homo sapiens Discoveries - Europe,
Asia, Australia
25
Early Modern Homo sapiens Discoveries - Europe,
Asia, Australia
26
Anatomically Modern Homosapiens (Asia and
Australia).
27
Anatomically Modern Humans in Europe
28
Early Modern Homo Sapiens in Central Europe
  • The Mlade c (a) and Dolní V estonice (b) crania,
    from the Czech Republic, are good examples of
    early modern Homo sapiens in central Europe.

29
Cro-Magnon I
  • Cro-Magnon I (France).
  • In this specimen, modern traits are quite clear.
    (a) Lateral view. (b) Frontal view.

30
Timeline for Modern Homo Sapiens Discoveries
31
Techniques for Dating Middle and Upper
Pleistocene Sites
32
Techniques for Dating Middle and Upper
Pleistocene Sites
33
Flores Hominids
  • Cranium of adult female Homo floresiensis from
    Flores, Indonesia, dated 18,000 ya.

34
Location of the Flores Site in Indonesia
35
The New World
  • Ancestors of Native Americans reached the New
    World through migration over the Bering Land
    Bridge over many millennia.
  • Debates continue, but at present, the only direct
    evidence of hominids in the New World date to
    about 12,000 y.a.

36
Anatomically modern Homo sapiens and Homo
floresiensis
37
The Upper Paleolithic
  • Cultural period began in western Europe
    approximately 40,000 years ago.
  • Industries based on tool technologies
  • Chatelperronian
  • Aurignacian
  • Gravettian
  • Solutrean
  • Magdalenian

38
Upper Paleolithic Tools
  • (a) Burin. A very common Upper Paleolithic tool.
  • (b) Solutrean blade. This is the best-known work
    of the Solutrean tradition.
  • Solutrean stonework is considered the most highly
    developed of any Upper Paleolithic industry.

39
Cultural Periods of the European Upper Paleolithic
40
Upper Paleolithic Grave
  • Skeleton of two teenagers, a male and a female,
    from Sungir, Russia.
  • Dated 24,000 ya, this is the richest find of any
    Upper Paleolithic grave.

41
The Punch Blade Technique
  • (a) A large core is selected and the top portion
    is removed by use of a hammerstone.

42
The Punch Blade Technique
  • (b) The objective is to create a flat surface
    called a striking platform.

43
The Punch Blade Technique
  • (c) Next, the core is struck by use of a hammer
    and punch (made of bone or antler) to remove the
    long narrow flakes (called blades).

44
The Punch Blade Technique
  • (d) Or the blades can be removed by pressure
    flaking.

45
The Punch Blade Technique
  • (e) The result is the production of highly
    consistent sharp blades, which can be used, as
    is, as knives or they can be further modified
    (retouched) to make a variety of other tools
    (such as burins, scrapers, and awls).

46
Magdalenian Bone Artifact
  • Note the realistic animal engraving on this
    object, the precise function of which is unknown.

47
Artifacts from the Middle Stone Age of Africa and
the Upper Paleolithic in Europe
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