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Australopithecines: The Earliest Definite Hominids

The Australopithecines- Anthropology

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Page 1: The Australopithecines- Anthropology

Australopithecines: The Earliest Definite Hominids

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Origins and Classifications• In the mainland of Africa, discoveries of fossils

are the work of the paleoanthropologists just to trace the origins of man.

• Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Kenya- were the places of particular excavations and believed that man or bipedal hominids lived and walked there between 4 -3 million years ago.

• At Laetoli, Tanzania, more than 50 hardened humanlike footprints from about 3.6 million years old.

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Origins and Classifications

• Excavated evidences in Africa were classified as Australopithecines.

• Paleoanthropologists divided the genus australopithecus into four species.

– Australopithecus anamensis

– Australopithecus afarensis

– Australopithecus africanus

– Australopithecus boisei

– Australopithecus robustus

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Australopithecus Anamensis

• Discovered at the east of Lake Turkana, Kenya

• Believed to be 4.2 million years

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Australopithecus Afarensis

• Found in the east of Africa from 4 to 3 million years ago.

• It was depicted that the fossils of these species are clear bipeds and thus originated from Laetoli, Hadar, and Ethiopia.

• Paleoanthropologist based their classification through the appearances of their teeth, jaws, and skull are still more alike to apes.

• Believed to be the fore species of the A. africanus.

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Australopithecus Africanus

• Lived between 3 to 2 million years ago.

• Excavated at the caves at Sterkfontein and Makapansgat in South Africa.

• The braincase is rounded with relatively well-developed forehead.

• It was also believed that the Taung Child by Dr. Raymond Dart was so similar with this type of specie.

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Australopithecus boisei and robustus

• Robustus lived in East Africa and in South Africa about 2.5 to 1 million years ago.

• Classified too as paranthropus which means beside humans.

• Believed to be resided at the caves in Kromdraai and in Swartkrans, and later in the Omo basin in Ethiopia, lake in Turkana Kenya and in Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania.

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Australopithecus boisei and robustus

• Boisei was believed to walked around 2.5 million years ago.

• Paleoanthropologist refer boisei as descendants from the robustus and the africanus and thus, named as Australopithecus aethiopicus.

• Characterized as having extreme features with large molars, thick and deep jaws, thick cheek bones

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Early Species : HOMO

• They are hominids that are absolutely and relatively larger than that of the australopithecines appear about 2.5 million years ago.

• Classified in our own specie, homo, discovered in Olduvai Gorge by Louis Leakey, Phillip Tobias, and John Napier.

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HOMO HABILIS

• Classified as the first specie of the homo genus.

• Apparently lived in the same place together with the robustus and boisei.

• They do have large brains and reduced molars and premolars.

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Homo Erectus

• They were found first in Java, China ,and Africa.

• It was believed that they moved and lived in Eastern Africa round 1.6 million years ago and about 1 million years ago in Asia.

• Recent re-dating suggest that early discoveries of H. erectus in Java maybe somewhat older dating to perhaps 1.8 million years ago.

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Homo Sapiens

• Scientist believed that the H. Erectus evolved to Homo Sapiens.

• Early fossils of the discoveries of the Homo Sapiens were found in Africa, Europe and Asia.

• Particular in Broken Hill mine in Zambia dating from 200,000 years ago.

• Its cranial capacity is 1200 cc.

• Low forehead, large brow ridges.

• Closely related to the Neandertals who were considered also as the modern human beings classified as Homo Sapiens Neandertalensis.

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Early Hominid Cultures

• Tool Traditions (2.5 million years)

• Percussion flaking

– Striking stone with another stone

• Unifacial tools

• Bifacial tools

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Life style

• Archaeologists believed that early hominids in Olduvai Gorge had already specific lifestyles.

• They were very particular with their stone tools.

• Tools were studied and analyzed, and then believed to be used for whittling wood into sharp-pointed sticks, dismembering animals, and slitting the hides of some animals.

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Early Hominid Cultures

• H. erectus used stone tools, known as Acheulian tool that was formed and discovered as stone-like hammers.

• Big –Game Eating

• Control of Fire

• Campsites

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