Midterm 3 study guide - bio anth

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
full-widthCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/99

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

100 Terms

1
New cards

Taung Child

- Species of Australopithecus africanus

- Small brain (440cc), bipedal

- First individual australopith described

2
New cards

Raymond Dart

- discoverer of Taung child, first australopith (africanus)

3
New cards

Endocast

a cast of the inside of a skull; used to help determine the size and shape of the brain

4
New cards

Orthognathic

a flat face - associated with a decrease in molar tooth size

5
New cards

Prognathic

Protruding jaw

6
New cards

sagittal crest

Bony projection on top of the cranium for attachment of chewing muscles

7
New cards

Diastema

space near teeth to make room for large canines

8
New cards

Foramen Magnum

A large opening at the base of the skull through which the brain connects to the spinal cord

9
New cards

Tuang Child's foramen mangum

more centered below the skull, suggesting bipedalism

10
New cards

Australopithecus Africanus

- first discovered hominin species

- discovered in south africa

- long arms and curved phalanges(fingers); adapted for climbing trees

- high sexual dimorphism

- shorter relative legs than humans

- low canine dimorphism

- less hard foods; middle of the road

11
New cards

Eoanthropus Dawsoni - Piltdown Man

Fraudulent hominin find - sowed doubt in Taung Child/Dart

12
New cards

Sterkfontein

- limestone caves located in South Africa

- STS 5; Skull of Mrs. Ples (A. Africanus)

- STS 14; Pelvis, vertebrae, femur (A. Africanus)

13
New cards

STS 5

Skull of Mrs. Ples (A. Africanus) (Sterkfontein)

14
New cards

STS 14

Pelvis, vertebrae, femur (A. Africanus) (Sterkfontein)

Showed bipedalism;

-pelvis; lesser gluteals

-femur angled outward; balanced stride

-vertebrae; Lumbar Lordosis (spine curve)

15
New cards

Lesser Gluteal

Muscles that abduct (side to side)

CRITICAL FOR BIPEDAL BALANCE

16
New cards

Bicondylar Angle

Abducting hip position/femur angled outwards, keeps us walking in narrow line

takes stress off of lesser gluteals; efficient bipedalism

17
New cards

Lumbar Lordosis

Lumbar (lower back) is s-shaped; moves center of gravity back over hip joint

18
New cards

Kromdraai

Broom found fossils at this site in South Africa but named a new genus for them, Paranthropus robustus.

19
New cards

Swartkrans

Discovery site of SK 48; Paranthropus robustus skull

- fire may have been used here

20
New cards

Paranthropus robustus

-sturdier and muscular hominin

-Sagittal crest supported large temporalis muscles for chewing

-large teeth

-likely ate hard foods

-large mandibles (robust jaw)

-wide cheek bones

-bowl like face

-was proof of nonlinear hominin evolution

-younger than A. Africanus

21
New cards

Temporal Foramen

hole in skull that temporalis muscles pass through to reach mandible (lower jaw)

22
New cards

Australopith

broad term for all Paranthropus (robust) and Australopithecus (gracile) species

Shared traits relative to chimpanzees:

-brainer

-less prognathic

-smaller canines

-medium hardness foods

23
New cards

Megadontia Quotient

measure of premolar/molar tooth area relative to body size

24
New cards

Hominin teeth

Generally huge compared to body size (relative to humans) and very thick enamel

25
New cards

Homoplasy

A similar (analogous) structure or molecular sequence that has evolved independently in two species;

ex. chickens and flies both have wings

26
New cards

Homologies

similarities resulting from common ancestry;

whale flippers and human hand similarity

-helpful in establishing evolutionary relationships

27
New cards

Derived Traits

newly evolved features, such as feathers, that do not appear in the fossils of common ancestors

28
New cards

ancestral traits

more primitive characteristic that appeared in common ancestors

29
New cards

Phylogeny

Evolutionary history of a species

30
New cards

Outgroups

closely related to X, but not X's group

31
New cards

Cladogram

Diagram that shows the evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms

<p>Diagram that shows the evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms</p>
32
New cards

Cladistics

A phylogenetic classification system that uses shared derived characters and ancestry as the sole criterion for grouping taxa

33
New cards

clades

A group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants; features shared derived traits

34
New cards

Monophyletic

shared characteristics / all descended taxa

-can't evolve out of being a mammal for example

35
New cards

Paraphyletic

"incorrect" basically; does not have all descended taxa; typical of outdated and incorrect taxa

36
New cards

Polyphyletic

groups based on traits that are convergent

37
New cards

convergent traits

Similar traits, devloped individually (i.e. bipedalism in humans v. chickens)

38
New cards

Biological Species Concept

Species is a group of populations whose members have the potential to produce fertile offspring

39
New cards

Hybrids

offspring that result from an interspecific mating - many are sterile, but ligers can mate with lions for example

40
New cards

Ring species

a connected series of neighboring populations that can interbreed with relatively closely related populations, but for which there exist at least two "end" populations in the series that are too distantly related to interbreed.

41
New cards

Morphospecies

species defined by anatomical features

42
New cards

intraspecific variation

Differences between organisms of the same species

43
New cards

interspecific variation

variation among members of different species

44
New cards

Law of Superposition

The geologic principle that states that in horizontal layers of sedimentary rock, each layer is older than the layer above it and younger than the layer below it

45
New cards

Biostratigraphy

relative dating technique using comparison of fossils from different stratigraphic sequences to estimate which layers are older and which are younger

46
New cards

Absolute/Chronometric Dating

a method of dating fossils in which the actual age of a deposit or specimen is measured

47
New cards

Dendrochronology

Tree ring dating

48
New cards

40k/40Ar

Potassium/Argon dating;

1.3 billion year half life

49
New cards

Uranium/Lead Dating (U/Pb)

Use uranium decay compared to lead half life to date in ranges

50
New cards

Speleothem

sheet of flat calcium carbonate rock

often used for U/Pb dating (which dates in ranges)

51
New cards

Lucy

Famous Australopithecus afarensis fossil discovered in 1974

52
New cards

Sexual Dimorphism in A. Africanus and P. Robustus

more than chimpanzees

53
New cards

Amelogenins

proteins responsible for growing/shaping enamel; two forms- y and x chromosomes; amel x/amel y

54
New cards

Amelogenins and fossils

because they are carried on x and y, amelogenin analysis can reveal gender of teeth/fossil

55
New cards

Drawbacks of big canines

low mouth mobility; difficulty grinding with molars

56
New cards

Potential causes of bipedalism

carrying

postural feeding

energy efficiency

thermoregulation

57
New cards

Carrying hypothesis for bipedalism

championed by Lovejoy; Carrying of food or young, male brings home food and needs to carry shit--hypothesis lacks direct evidence

58
New cards

Postural feeding hypothesis for bipedalism

need to stand and pick fruit from bushes and trees

59
New cards

Energy efficiency hypothesis for bipedalism

championed by Rodman and McHenry; bipedalism is more energy efficient than quadrupedalism

-fruit distribution lessens, so had to move efficiently to patchy forests to find food

60
New cards

Issues with theories of bipedalism

General lack of evidence, so its hard to say which cause prompted the evolution of bipedalism

61
New cards

thermoregulation hypothesis for bipedalism

bipeds get less sun generally, so bipedalism would be efficient; theorized that up to 40% less water needed

62
New cards

East African Rift / dating

as Africa splits at the rift, layers are exposed for argon/argon dating

63
New cards

Hadar site

Site in Ethiopia (East Africa), Lucy's home

Australopithecus Afarensis discovery site

64
New cards

Patellar groove

where patella articulates with the femur (at the knee);

keeps knee from slipping out due to bicondylar angle

65
New cards

AL 288-1

Lucy; A. Afarensis - found at Hadar in Ethiopia - 3.2myo

66
New cards

Dikika site

Neighboring Hadar; more A. Afarensis - 3yo skull found

67
New cards

Laetoli footprints

earliest direct evidence of hominin bipedalism; 3.6 million years old; footprints preserved in a layer hardened volcanic ash

68
New cards

Laetoli site

Tanzania, Conclusive Evidence of hominin bipedalism

69
New cards

Holotype

a single type specimen upon which the description and name of a new species is based

70
New cards

Burtele foot

- 3.4 Myo

- Middle Awash

- Divergent Big Toe

71
New cards

Kenyanthropus platyops

A proposed genus and species of biped contemporary with early australopithecines; may not be a separate genus

72
New cards

Australopithecus afarensis

- smaller than A. Africanus

- discovered in eastern Africa

- generally more primitive

- prognathic face

- large canines/canine dimorphism

- smaller teeth than P. Robustus

- thick enamel

- powerful wrists for trees

- cranially primitive

73
New cards

Australopithecus anamensis

- oldest species of australopithecine from East Africa

- likely ancestor to A. afarensis

- wide canine

- small brain

74
New cards

Amaris site

- 4myo

- discovery of Ardipithecus Ramidus

-

75
New cards

Ardipithecus Ramidus

- best dated species (4myo)

- discovered at Amaris

- chimp-esque brain

- big canines, small teeth, thin enamel

- likely upright at times, but not always

- pelvis more humanlike than chimplike

- probably bipedal on ground, quad in trees

76
New cards

Orrorin tugenensis

- 6myo

- big canines, small teeth, thick enaml

- curved fingers for trees

- strong arms

- indicators of bipedalism; obturator externus groove (groove on femural head, tendons run across back of femur)

77
New cards

Sahelanthropus tchadensis

- small canines

- flat face

- chimp size brain

- earliest pre-australopithecine species found in central Africa with possible evidence of bipedalism

- probably not an actual hominin; evidence is locked away...hmmm

78
New cards

Nonlinear Human Evolution

Humans did not evolve from a single line; there were multiple different bipedal hominins of different lineage, we are simply the survivors

79
New cards

Olduvai Gorge

- 25 mile rift in Tanzania (E. Africa)

- 1.8myo stone tools found

- home of Paranthropus Boisei / OH 5; Zinj

80
New cards

OH 5

Zinj; Famous Paranthropus boisei skull found at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania in East Africa

- dated with K/Ar; 1.8myo

81
New cards

Paranthropus Boisei

- small canines

- wide cheeks

- sagittal crest

- flat face

- similar to P. Robustus

- 1.8myo

- ate SOFT foods, surprisingly; may have fallen back on hard foods during hard times, preferring soft foods overall

82
New cards

OH 7

- First homo; Homo habilis

- jaw, skull, foot

83
New cards

Homo habilis

- small teeth

- big brain (657cc)

- prognathic face

- very dexterous hands

84
New cards

Cerebral Rubicon

minimum cranial capacity required for a specimen to be classified as a certain paleospecies or genus; around 700-750ccs

85
New cards

Koobi Fora

- site for oldest H. erectus; possible use of fire here

- multiple species at large

86
New cards

Homo rudolfensis

- 774cc cranium

- orthognathic face

- discovered at Koobi Fora

87
New cards

Animals frequency at hominin sites

Animal fossils are common at early homo sites--helpful in determining diet and environment

88
New cards

Alcelaphinae

the SUBFAMILY of Family Bovidae that consists of the wildebeest and topi

89
New cards

Bovidae

have horns (cows, buffalo, sheep, goat, antelope, gazelle): bony core with keratin sheath on outside, never shed. all males have horns and often females

-presence in fossil record indicates grassland environment

90
New cards

Duiker

a small African antelope

91
New cards

Tragelaphini

spiral horned antelopes found near Australopithecus sites

92
New cards

Homo ecology

when Homo starts to show up, we see lots of grazing animals and less arboreal species; this suggests grasslands, which helps determine diet

93
New cards

Australopithecus ecology

more wooded areas than Paranthropus and Homo

94
New cards

C3 plants

the most common and the most efficient at photosynthesis in cool, wet climates

95
New cards

C4 Plants

plants that have adapted their photosynthetic process to more efficiently handle hot and dry conditions

96
New cards

Ardipithecus environment

potentially lived in forest pockets in grasslands

97
New cards

Palynology

the study of fossil pollen grains and spores to reconstruct past climates and human behavior

98
New cards

stone tool use

used to process plants and animals for consumption

99
New cards

frugivore teeth

Large, broad incisors. Low cusps for crushing soft fruits

100
New cards

folivore teeth

Long crests on molars, good for shearing cellulose

(mountain-like)