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12.5: End of Chapter Review

  • Page ID
    177730
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    Test Your Knowledge
    1. What are the skeletal and behavioral traits that define modern Homo sapiens? What are the evolutionary explanations for its presence?
    2. What are some creative ways that researchers have learned about the past by studying fossils and artifacts?
    3. How do the discoveries mentioned in “First Africa, Then the World” fit the Assimilation model?
    4. What is foraging and what adaptations do we have for this subsistence strategy? Could you train to be a skilled forager?
    5. What are aspects of your life that come from dependence on agriculture and its cultural effects? Where did the ingredients of your favorite foods originate from?

    GLOSSARY

    African multiregionalism: The idea that modern Homo sapiens evolved as a complex web of small regional populations with sporadic gene flow among them.

    Agriculture: The mass production of resources through farming and domestication.

    Amerindian: Term used to refer to the ancient humans of North and South America.

    Assimilation model: Current theory of modern human origins stating that the species evolved first in Africa and interbred with archaic humans of Europe and Asia.

    Atlatl: A handheld spear thrower that increased the force of thrown projectiles.

    Band: A small group of people (usually less than 100) living together as foragers.

    Beringia: Prehistoric landmass that connected Siberia and Alaska. The ancestors of Paleoindians would have crossed this area to reach the Americas.

    Beringia Standstill Model: Theory that people were genetically isolated in Beringia before expanding to the Americas.

    Carrying capacity: The amount of organisms that an environment could reliably support.

    Coastal Route model: Theory that the first Paleoindians crossed to the Americas by following the southern coast of Beringia.

    Dental caries: Damage to tooth enamel due to the waste products of built-up bacteria. Known in the general public as cavities.

    Early Modern Homo sapiens: Terms used to refer to transitional fossils between archaic and modern Homo sapiens that have a mosaic of traits. Humans like ourselves, who mostly lack archaic traits, are referred to as Late Modern Homo sapiens and simply Anatomically Modern Humans.

    Egalitarian: Human organization without strict ranks. Foraging societies tend to be more egalitarian than those based on other subsistence strategies.

    Generalist-specialist niche: The ability to survive in a variety of environments by developing local expertise. Evolution toward this niche may have been what allowed modern Homo sapiens to expand past the geographical range of other human species.

    Globalization: A recent increase in the interconnectedness and interdependence of people facilitated with long-distance networks.

    Globular: Having a rounded appearance. Increased globularity of the braincase is a trait of modern Homo sapiens.

    Holocene: The epoch of the Cenozoic Era starting around 12,000 years ago and lasting arguably through the present.

    Ice-Free Corridor model: Theory that the first prehistoric Native Americans crossed to the Americas through a passage between glaciers.

    Institutions: Long-lasting and influential cultural constructs. Examples include government, organized religion, academia, and the economy.

    Introgression: The uneven mixing of DNA over time in which a small amount of outside genetic material is incorporated into a larger genome.

    Kelp Highway hypothesis: Addition to the Coastal Route model that focuses on the use of kelp-based environments as a resource.

    Last Glacial Maximum: The time 23,000 years ago when the most recent ice age was the most intense.

    Later Stone Age: Time period following the Middle Stone Age with a diversification in tool types, starting around 50,000 years ago.

    Levant: The eastern coast of the Mediterranean. The site of early modern human expansion from Africa and later one of the centers of agriculture.

    Malocclusion: The misalignment of the jaw due to the soft diets of agriculturalists. The healthy development of the jaw, including making room for all of the teeth, depends on experiencing a higher level of physical force than what people experience with farmed and processed foods. The term literally means “bad shutting.”

    Mental eminence: The chin on the mandible of modern H. sapiens. One of the defining traits of our species.

    Microlith: Small stone tool found in the Later Stone Age; also called a bladelet.

    Middle Stone Age: Time period known for Mousterian lithics that connects African archaic to modern Homo sapiens.

    Monumental architecture: Large and labor-intensive constructions that signify the power of the elite in a sedentary society. A common type is the pyramid, a raised crafted structure topped with a point or platform.

    Mosaic: Composed from a mix or composite of traits.

    Multiregionalism: Theory that modern Homo sapiens evolved simultaneously in Africa, Asia, and Europe from archaic populations.

    Neolithic Revolution: Time of rapid change to human cultures due to the invention of agriculture, starting around 12,000 years ago.

    Out of Africa model: Theory that modern Homo sapiens expanded from Africa to cover the rest of the world without interacting with archaic humans.

    Paleoamerican, Paleoindian: Terms used to refer to the ancient humans of North and South America.

    Sahul: Prehistoric landmass connecting New Guinea and Australia.

    Sedentarism: Lifestyle based on having a stable home area; the opposite of nomadism.

    Southern Dispersal model: Theory that modern H. sapiens expanded from East Africa by crossing the Red Sea and following the coast east across Asia.

    Subsistence strategy: The method an organism uses to find nourishment and other resources.

    Sunda: Asian prehistoric landmass that incorporated modern Southeast Asia.

    Supraorbital torus: The bony brow ridge across the top of the eye orbits on many hominin crania.

    Upper Paleolithic: Time period considered synonymous with the Later Stone Age.

    Urbanization: The increase of population density as people settled together in cities.

    Wallacea: Archipelago southeast of Sunda with different biodiversity than Asia.

    Younger Dryas: The rapid change in global climate, especially a cooling of the Northern Hemisphere, 13,000 years ago.

    FOR FURTHER EXPLORATION

    Websites

    Ministère de la Culture and Musée d’Archéologie Nationale. “Visit the cave” Lascaux website. http://archeologie.culture.fr/lascaux/en/visit-cave.

    SAPIENS. “Evolution.” SAPIENS website. www.sapies.org/category/evolution/.

    Smithsonian Institution. “What does it mean to be human?” Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History website. http://humanorigins.si.edu.

    ThoughtCo. “Archaeology.” ThoughtCo. Website. https://www.thoughtco.com/archaeology-4133504.

    University of California, San Diego. “MOCA Domains.” Center for Academic Research & Training in Anthropogeny website. https://carta.anthropogeny.org/moca/domains.

    Books

    Kolbert, Elizabeth. 2014. The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History. New York: Bloomsbury.

    Sykes, Bryan. 2002. The Seven Daughters of Eve: The Science That Reveals Our Genetic Ancestry. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.

    Articles

    Stringer, C. 2016. “The Origin and Evolution of Homo sapiens.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 371 (1698): doi:10.1098/rstb.2015.0237.

    Trinkaus, E. 2018. “One Hundred Years of Paleoanthropology: An American Perspective.” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 165 (4): 638–651.

    Wheelwright, Jeff. 2015. “Days of Dysevolution.” Discover 33–39. http://discovermagazine.com/2015/may/16-days-of-dysevolution.

    Wierer, Ursula, Simona Arrighi, Stefano Bertola, Günther Kaufmann, Benno Baumgarten, Annaluisa Pedrotti, Patrizia Pernter, and Jacques Pelegrin. 2018. “The Iceman’s Lithic Toolkit: Raw Material, Technology, Typology and Use.” PLOS One 13 (6): e0198292. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0198292.

    Documentaries

    Brown, Nicholas, dir. 2015. First Peoples. Edmonton: Wall to Wall Television. Amazon Prime Video.

    Thompson, Niobe, dir. 2016. Great Human Odyssey. Edmonton: Clearwater Documentary. www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/evolution/great-human-odyssey.html.


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