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The Beginnings of Humanity

The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

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4 Million Years Ago - Australopithecus Located across Africa in Woodlands & Grasslands Walked Only Shorter Arms Ate tougher foods (thicker enamel on teeth) Larger Brain * Dikika Baby, Age 3

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Page 1: The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

The Beginnings of Humanity

Page 2: The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus

Located In East Africa

Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands

Ate ripe fruits and animals (thin enamel on teeth = soft foods)

Page 3: The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

4 Million Years Ago - Australopithecus

Located across Africa in Woodlands & Grasslands

Walked Only Shorter Arms Ate tougher foods

(thicker enamel on teeth) Larger Brain

* Dikika Baby, Age 3

Page 4: The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

2 Million Years Ago - Homo

Left Africa and traveled to Europe (Spain) and Asia (China/Java)

Developed Stone Tools Teeth and Jaws smaller Larger Brain Rituals Began

Page 5: The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

Conclusion

• How much have human developed over the past 6 million years?

• How different are 21st century humans from the earliest humans?

*Dresden, 1945 *Ghana

Page 6: The Beginnings of Humanity. 6 Million Years Ago - Ardipithecus Located In East Africa Climbed Trees (4 Limbs) and Walked (2 Limbs) in Woodlands Ate ripe

Sources

1. National Geographic, July 2010

2. Ardipithecus Skeleton (Slide 2) from Discover Magazine.com http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/loom/2009/10/01/ardipithecus-we-meet-at-last/

3. “Ardipithecus Ramidus Lights the Way,” National Geographic.com http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/human-evolution/human-ancestor

4. “Childhood Origins,” by Christopher P. Sloan, National Geographic, November 2006. http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2006/11/dikika-baby/sloan-text

5. http://www.iupui.edu/~mstd/a103/Paleolithic%20Tool%20Types.htm