Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Test 2
Biological and Cultural Anthropology
155
Anthropology
Undergraduate 1
10/15/2008

Additional Anthropology Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Trends in Australopithecine Evolution
Definition

- TEETH: molar size increases, premolars grind instead of shear

- FACE: reduction in prognathism and development of cheek bones

- BRAIN: increase in size and perhaps internal reorganization

Term
Exogamy
Definition
"Marrying" outside of your group
Term
Mosaic Evolution
Definition

The concept that major evolutionary changes tend to take place in stages, not all at once, and that the rates of evolution vary from one system to another.

 

I.E., in Homonid evolution, the dental system, locomotor system and neurological system evolved at different rates

Term

Skeletal changes resulting from Bipedalism

Definition

Arms shorten, pelvis moves, foramen magnum shifts, feet develop arches, big toe alligns with rest of foot, knees can lock, joints change, curve of spine changes, hands get smaller, valgus angle changes

Term
Muscular/soft tissue changes of bipedalism.
Definition

Stabalization: Reduction of arm/chest muscles, knees, feet and core get stronger.

 

Weaker in general, heart strengthens to pump blood upward

Term
Brachiation
Definition
Strong body type made for swinging, long arms, etc. Compressed front to back.
Term
Lombrosso
Definition

"Criminal Types"

Term
Allopatric Speciation
Definition

When biological populations become physically isolated and evolve so that if the barrier breaks down individuals of what used to be the same populations can no longer interbreed.

 

A common method by which new species arise.

Term

MAOA Gene

Definition
A mutation that some believe leads to uncontrollable fits of rage.
Term
What can you tell from skeletally visable injuries?
Definition

- What sort of weapon was used

- When the injury happened

- If they healed, died immediately, or if the injury occured post mortum

- Face to face confrontation VS. group violence/warfare at a distance.

Term

Faunal Dating

Definition

A method of relative dating based on observing the evolutionary changes in particular species of mammals, so as to form a rough chronological sequence

Term
Sociobiological approach to violence in humans
Definition

Argues that there are genes that code for ALL behaviors- natural selection works on the brain too

 

Founder: E.O. Wilson

Term
The Killer Ape Hypothesis
Definition

-Raymond Darte

-20's and 30's

- Violence is inherent, "confirmed killers"

Term
The War at Gombe
Definition

-Jane Goodall's research site

-Chimp population reached carrying capacity, split in half and went North and South

-N. group begins acting violently towards the S. group

- Southern group eventually gets killed off entirely.

Term
2 Types of Chimp
Definition
Bonobo and Standard
Term
Molecular Clock
Definition
Technique in molecular evolution to relate the divergence time of two diverged species to the number of molecular differences measured between the species DNA sequence of proteins
Term
Anagenesis
Definition

The evolution of species involving a change in gene frequency in an entire population rather than a branching event.

 

The ENTIRE population is different from the ancestral population such that the ancestral population can be considered extinct

Term
Neoteny
Definition
The retention, by adults in a species, of traits previously seen only in juvenilles
Term

Two Types of Primates

Definition
Haplorhini and Strepsirhini
Term
Anthropomorphization
Definition
"Humanizing" animals; even applying our own Western culture to their actions
Term
Osteoperiostitis
Definition
When the top layer of bone is ripped off; evidence of child abuse
Term
Oldowan Tools
Definition

- Cores and flakes

- Found with Louis Leakey's discovery Homo Habilis in Oldowai gorge

Term
Chronospecies
Definition
A species which changes over time on an evolutionary scale such that the originating species and the species in becomes could not be classified as the same species had they existed at the same point in time.
Term
Cladogenesis
Definition

An evolutionary "branching" event in which  an evolutionary mechanism and a process of adaptive evolution lead to the development of a greater variety of sister organisms.

 

Usu. occurs  when a few organisms end up in a new area or environmental changes cause extinctions, opening up niches for survivors

Term
What are seven possible factors behind the change to bipedalism?
Definition

- Carrying objects

-Hunting

-Male Provisioning

-Feeding from Bushes

-Viewing landscape for predators

-Energy efficiency

-Relief from heat stress

Term
Primitive Accumilation
Definition
Getting people to leave their lands and go to cities to become wage laborers (through taxes, laws, etc.)
Term
Malinowski
Definition
Everything in society has a function, logical or not
Term
Modernization Theory
Definition

-Unilinear economic development; stages

- Done in name of civilization- countries "need" development.

 

Peasant -> Proletariat

Term

Archaeologists study ____________.

 

Historical archaeologists study ____________.

Definition

Artifacts, objects and remains.

 

History of words, laws, controlls.

Term
Legal Critical Theory
Definition

How the law and judicial systems serve to MAINTAIN and EXPAND the powers of the dominant class; Laws are not there to protect the marginal and less important people.

 

I.E. Toobin! Supreme court justices in for life, serve interests of their own class.

Term
Social Norms
Definition

Generally agreed upon or unwritten laws learned unconsciously through socialization; Maintain conformity

 

I.E. Standing in line, not dating a friends ex, etc.

Term
Hyperrealism
Definition

Gated, controlled communities

 

Hotels in vegas

 

"realer than real" reality TV

 

"Authentic Mexican Food"/ Restaurants

Term
Syntagmatic
Definition

The way you combine things

 

I.E. courses of a meal, their order

 

Think syntax!

Term
Culture Ecology Approach
Definition

Looks at how humans and environment exert pressure on each other

 

Weakness: ignores historical factors

Strengths: Interested in balanced relationships between humans and environment

Term
Folk Cookery Approach
Definition

Whats prepared at home

 

Everyday, domestic cookery w/ regional variation

 

Strengths: ethnographic/historical methods of research

Term
Symbolist Approach
Definition

Looks at food as an abstraction that embodies idealogical meaning

 

Religion!

 

Strengths: highlights how food marks social relations, hierarchies, gender relations, class, race, power relations

Term
Regionalist Approach
Definition

Outline world-wide food crops and products, dietary selection

 

Weakness: good at the village, household, individual level, but not higher

 

Strengths: food patterns emerge in the initial stages of research

Term
Nutritional-Anthro Approach
Definition

Anthropological knowledge used to solve problems

 

Strenths: Relationship between culture and diet.

Term

Semiotics is _________

 

Define Symbol, Indexical and Iconical

Definition

The study of signs

 

Symbols: Words or gestures, I.E. a wink

Iconical: Resemblers, I.E. picture, flag

Indexical: Causal connections, I.E. smoke = fire, A1= Steak

Term
Foodway Approach
Definition

Includes focus on thought and background

 

Interested in total cookery complex, looks at food taboos and attitudes

 

Strengths- prep of food, psychology, social functions

Term
Culture History Approach
Definition

Comprehensive, Interdisciplinary Approach; French Annales School

 

Strengths: interdisciplinary, archaeology, history, oral history, linguistics

Term
Functionalism Approach
Definition

Interested in finding how food satisfies social needs

 

Weakness: ahistorical, ignores cultural-ecology, cultural history

 

Strengths: Contemporary uses of food and looks at nonnutritive and economic uses of food

Term
Semiotical Approach
Definition

Interested in the construction and distribution of meaning

 

Weakness: can be ahistorical

 

Strengths: Political, questions status quo and how meanings perpetuate the interests of power groups

Term
Antonio Gramsci
Definition
The scholar who is credited with developing the concept of hegemony; Italian and imprisioned because he was a labor organizer during the Mussolini dictatorship
Term
Roland Barthes
Definition
The semiotic scholar interested in making explicit what was implicity obvious in cultural texts and cultural practices
Term
Stimulus Diffusion
Definition
Borrowing of an item from another culture followed by that item serving as stimulus to invent something similar
Term
Levi-Strauss
Definition
The structuralist scholar that was interested in searching for the universal consciousness of the human mind. He viewed cultural practices (cooking, dress, myths, etc.) as cultural texts and beings analogous to language.
Term
Environmentalism Approach
Definition

Considered to be environmental determinism; looks at causal factors between culture, health, environment

 

Weakness: ignores human beings/ historical factors

Strengths: dietary patterns are the result of environmental factors

Term
Indirect/Intermediate Diffusion
Definition

Item/idea is brought to a culture through a 3rd party (trade)

 

First and final cultures are never in direct contact

Term
What are the four sub-disciplines of anthropology?
Definition

-Culture

-Biology

-Linguistics

-Archaeology

Term
Paradigmatic
Definition

When you substitute one thing for another

 

I.E. Romantic meal, messy foods --> clean foods

Term
There are two kinds of innovation: one has to deal with discovering something that has always existed, and this kind of innovation is called ________. The other kind of innovation is created by human beings when they use existing knowledge and techology and this is called ________ innovation.
Definition
Primary; Secondary
Term
Syncretism
Definition

When you borrow something and change it to fit your cultural system

 

Consists of the attempt to reconcile contradictory beliefs, often while melding practices of various schools of though. Occurs commonly in literature, music, art, food etc.

Term
Forced Diffusion
Definition
When one culture conquers another culture and forces its own customs on the conquered people
Term
Direct Diffusion
Definition

When two very close cultures fight, trade, intermarry, take ideas

 

Direct contact

Term
Structuralist Approach
Definition

Tries to uncover the rules and norms that govern the production of meaning

 

Analytical, not evaluative methods.

 

Weakness: Ahistorical

Strength: Uncovers structures that construct meaning and the consciousness of the universal mind by analyzing cultural practices

Term

Five forms of social controls

Definition

- Norms

-Laws

-Consequences

-Punishments

- Survailors

Term
Functionalist approach to social control and conflict
Definition
People create obligations, social ties, etc. to create harmony
Term
Structuralist approach to social control and conflict
Definition

Societies have particular structures to maintain conformity/harmony

 

I.E. court, education, medical systems, etc.

Term
Social Order
Definition

Used to impose power, maintain the order of everyday life

 

Maintain and expand the power of the dominant group

Term
Hegemonic approach to dissent
Definition

-Coop the dissenters

-Shut down the dissenters

-Ignore the dissenters (they don't exist)

Term
Materialist Philosophy and Scholars
Definition

Material conditions are prime movers; Observable behavior

 

Rozin

Marvin Harris

Term
Idealist philosophy and scholars
Definition

Cognitive theories, Ideas

 

Levi Strauss

Mary Douglass

Term
Why do we "respect" those we fear?
Definition

Don't know what they're capable of

 

Motivational factor (Grade, social status, etc.)

Term
The emergence of a global economy leads to...
Definition

Colonialization

 

-Conquring people, putting them to work, ending up with products

 

Began approx 5 centuries ago

Term
External Vs. Internal Social Control
Definition

External: A removed person

 

Internal: controlling each other; gossip, ostracization; beliefs, values, religion

Term
Regional-Continuity Model
Definition

Humans evolved more or less simultaneously across the entire old world from several ancestral populations

Term

Rapid Replacement Model (AKA "Out of Africa")

 

Definition
Humans evolved only once- in Africa from H. Heidelbergensis ancestors- and then migrated throughout the Old World, replacing thier archaic predecessors.
Term
Paleoanthropology
Definition

The study of ancient humans

 

Multidisciplinary- anthropology, geology, paleontology and paleoecology (ancient environments)

Term
How do paleoanthropologists reconstruct the human past?
Definition

1. Finding fossil remains of homonids

2. Dating those remains

3. Putting the remains in an ecological or social context

4. Reconstructing the ancient environment the ancestors lived in

Term
Fossils are...
Definition
Remains of plants and animals preserved in the ground. When preserved long enough, the organic material in the bones is replaced by minerals from the surrounding rock.
Term
What anatomical characteristics are paleoanthropologists concerned with?
Definition
Cranial Volume, teeth and the limbs and pelvis (locomotion)
Term

Fossil provenience

Definition
The exact location where a fossil is found- ESSENTIAL!
Term
Taphonomy
Definition
The study of what happens to plants and animals after they die
Term
Paleoecology
Definition
Reconstructing ancient environments
Term
Palynology
Definition

Study of fossil pollen

 

Can provide info about the plant environment, I.E. rainforest or savanna?

Term
Relative Dating Method: Stratigraphy
Definition

The study of the sequential layering of earth deposits. Older remains are deeper than new ones.

 

Problem: Earth disturbances shift layers

Term
Relative Dating Method: Biostratigraphy
Definition

Using index fossils of other organisms with know dates to date fossils. I.E. Dating a homonid with a nearby fossil antelope species that we know existed at a certain time

 

Problem: Earth disturbances

Term
Relative Dating Methods: Fluorine Analysis
Definition

The longer bone is buried, the more fluorine it will accumulate through groundwater seepage; can then be compared with other bones in the area to determine whether it's older or younger

 

Problem: bones must be from the same location, amount of fluorine in environment can vary

Term
Absolute/ "Chronometric" Dating Method: Carbon-14 Dating
Definition

The element carbon, present in living organisms, decays at a known rate once the organism dies

 

Problem: only dates remains up to 50,000 years old, material can be contaminated

Term
Absolute/ "Chronometric" Dating Method: Potassium-Argon (K/Ar) dating
Definition

Radioactive potassium (found in volcanic rock) decays into stable argon gas, allowing a date to be assigned to a fossil buried between layers of volcanic rock.

 

Problems: Large margins of error

 

Ar/Ar dating slightly more accurate

Term
Absolute/ "Chronometric" Dating Method: Electron Spin Resonance
Definition

Can measure the number of electrons that have become traped in crystalline materials at a regular rate.

 

Problems: Age range 60,000 to 1 million years; can work on tooth enamel or shell, but not on bone

Term
Parallel Evolution
Definition

When two cultures that have never met are developing similarly at the same time

 

I.E. pyramids in Egypt and South America, Agricultural revolution, Language/writing, calenders

Term
_____________ is the cultural concept that refers to a way of thinking and behaving. This way of thinking includes ideas, morality, ethics, customs, traditions and art.
Definition
Culture
Term
_____________ refers to social groups who develop distinct patterns of life, and give expressive form to their social and material life-experiences. It is the peculiar and distinctive way of life of the group or class.
Definition
Subculture
Term
__________ is the concept that refers to when a dominant culture uses superior military force to impose their will on the minority culture. 
Definition
Colonialism
Term
__________ is the type of approach to the study of food that involves everyday, domestic cookery and is marked by regional variation and uses ethnographic and historical sources.
Definition
Folk Cookery
Term
___________ is interested in finding how food satisfies social needs and looks at the non-nutritive and economic uses of food.
Definition
The Functionalist approach
Term
_______________ is the approach to the study of food that looks at causal factors between culture, health and environment.
Definition
Indexical
Term
__________ this research approach looks at food taboos and food attitudes, along with the total cookery complex of food, including the preparation, psychological and social functions of food and the morphology of food.
Definition
Foodways
Term

Cultural anthropologists have claimed that cultures accept or borrow cultural elements from another culture based on the following selective conditions:

a. _______

b. _______

c. _______

Definition

a. Usefulness

b. desireablitly

c. appropriateness

Term
_____________ is when a culture takes an item from another culture.
Definition

Cultural borrowing

Term
____________ is the type of diffusion (borrowing) that refers to when people of different cultures come into contact with each other and observe technology, food, clothing and may adopt some cultural elements.
Definition
Direct Diffusion
Term
_________ is a process by which cultures in contact borrow ideas and practices from one another, thereby modifying or replacing traditional ideas and practice.
Definition
Stimulus diffusion
Term
__________ is refered to as a form of cultural borrowing that occurs when a culture borrows an item from another culture and makes it fit into preexisting cultural arrangements.
Definition
Syncretism
Term
______________ is the concept that refers to when a dominant culture uses superior military force to impose their will on the minority culture
Definition
Colonialism
Term
_____________ refers to the process of imposing the ideas and practices of the dominant culture upon other cultures, which may result in the modification or elimination of the dominated culture.
Definition
cultural imperialsim
Term
___________ is a form of cultural imperialism in which the ideas and practices of Western European displaced many of the ideas and practices of the indigenous cultures of the colonies.
Definition

Hegemony

Term
List four characteristics associated with colonialism
Definition

a. cultural imperialism

b. exploitation of the colonized

c. a belief that the colonizer is superior to the colonized

d. violence in an attempt to gain control over the colonized

Term
____________ is the term that refers to the view that people and the planet earth are resources and the planet earth is one giant marketplace. It is synonymous with modernization, technology, westernization, and internationalization.
Definition
Globalization
Term
Emic
Definition
Perspective of the human being
Term
Enic
Definition
Perspective of the scholar
Term
Archbishop Ussher
Definition
Calculated the age of the earth from the Bible (4004 BC)
Term
Thomas Malthus
Definition

Influence on Darwin

 

Essay on population, wrote that human population expands exponentially while food and resources stay the same. Therefore, there is constant competition to survive

Term
Yohannes Haile-Selassie
Definition

Discovered the partial skeleton of Ardipithecus ramidus and fossils of Ardipithecus kadabba.

 

Middle Awash research group

 

Etheopian

Term
Tim White
Definition

American Paleoanthropologist

 

Coleader of Middle Awash Research Group

 

Berkeley

Term
Richard Leakey
Definition

Kenyan Paleontologist

 

National museums of Kenya

Term
Charles Lyell
Definition

Influenced Darwin

 

Principle of Uniformitarianism; "Principles of Geology"

 

Argued that the earth had a long history, rejected catastrophic explanations

Term
Georges Cuvier
Definition

Influenced Darwin

 

Explains fossil record with catastrophism; extinction

 

Opponent of evolution, religious

Term
Mary Leakey
Definition

British born illustrator and self trained paleontologist

 

Found the skull of Zinj in 1959 in Olduwai, Tanzania

Term
Elwyn Simons
Definition
American primate biologist, proposed Ramapithecus as an early homonid int he 1960's
Term
Meave Leakey
Definition
Zoologist, her team found fossils of Australopithecus anamensis at Kanapoi
Term
Eugene Dubois
Definition

Anatomist and paleontologist

 

discovered the first fossils of a hominid, Java Man, in 1890

Term
Bryan Patterson
Definition
Discovered fossils of early hominids in the mid-1960's at Kanapoi and Lothagam
Term
Comte De Buffon
Definition

Believed universe and nature are dynamic and that species have changed over time

 

dynamic relationship between organisms and their environment

Term
Louis Leakey
Definition

established E. Africa as a critical place for finding human ancestors

 

codiscoverer of Zinj in 1959

Term
Brigitte Senut
Definition

French paleontologist

 

discovered fossils of Millennium Man in the Tugen hills

Term
David Pilbeam
Definition

Team discovered fossils of ramapithecus in pakistan

Term
Yves Coppens
Definition
Codiscoverer of fossils of Lucy's species in Ethiopia
Term
Martin Pickford
Definition
Discovered fossils of Milennium man in the Tugen Hills
Term
Carolus Linneus
Definition

Father of Taxonomy

 

Grouped things into categories to construct a natural classification

Term
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
Definition

Influenced Darwin

 

Theory of inheritance of acquired characteristics

 

Organisms change to adapt to changing environmental circumstances

Term
Donald Johanson
Definition

Discovered Lucy in 1974

 

ASU!!!!!

Term
Michel Brunet
Definition
Leader of group that discovered Toumai and Abel
Term
John Ray
Definition

Noted variation among plants and animals

 

defined concept of species

 

species were created by God and never changed

Term
Raymond Dart
Definition
Discovered the first fossil of a human ancestor from Africa, Taung Baby, 1925
Term

Lyles Uniformity Principle

 

1 __________

2 __________

3 __________

Definition

1. Uniformity principle- past geological events must be explained by the same causes now in operation

 

2. Uniformity of rate principle- geographical laws operate w/same force as at present

 

3. Steady-state principle- earth does not undergo any directional change

Term

Major factors leading to variation in skeletal anatomy...

 

1. _________

2. _________

3. _________

4. _________

Definition

1. Ontogeny (Growth)

2. the sex of the individual

3. geographic or population based

4. anatomy

Term

Scientific Method

 

Definition

- Ask a question/ do background research

- Form a hypothesis

- Test your hypothesis through an experiment/research/observations

- Analyze your data/ draw a conclusion

- Communicate your results; was your hypothesis correct?

Term
Alfred Russel Wallace
Definition
Came to same conclusions as Darwin, they presented ideas of natural selecton together
Term
Bergman's Rule
Definition
Body size tends to be larger in colder climates
Term
Allen's Rule
Definition
Surface area is relevant
Term
Eugenics
Definition
Racial theories
Term
Phrenology
Definition
Skull/Head analysis
Term

 Five Subtheories that comprise Darwins Theory of Evolution

 

Definition

1. Descent with modification: world is ancient and steadily changing

2. Multiplication of species: Species multiply through time by splitting into daughter species

3. Single common ancestor: all life on earth had a single common ancestor

4. Gradualism: Evolutionary change takes place through gradual modification; there is no sudden production of entirely new types

5. Natural Selection: Better adaptation = reproductive success = perpetuation of organisms of those qualities

Term
5 Pre-Darwinian concepts crucial to the development of evolutionary theory
Definition

- Variation and similarity within and among species

- Extinction of species

- Adaptation

- population growth and the struggle for existence

- uniformitarianism

Term

Ardipithecus ramidus

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Root Ape"

Ethiopia

Dates: 4.4 MYA

Traits: Proposed as earliest known hominid; primitive baby molar; possible evidence of upright walking; forward positioned formen magnum

Term

Australopithecus anamensis

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

Kenya 

Dates: 4.2- 3.9 MYA

Traits: Shinbone shows upright walking, aboreal climbling?; Thick tooth enamel= harder food items;  Extreme prognathism

Term

Australopithecus afarensis

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Lucy"

Ethiopia

Dates: 4.2-2.5 MYA

Traits: Earliest member of human family for 20 years; small brain, yet walked upright; large canines AND molars, prognathic face, low, flat forehead, large brows and low-vaulted braincase

Term

Australopithecus bahrelghazali

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Abel"

Chad

Dates: 3.5-3.0 MYA

Traits: First fossil of early homoinid from central Africa, which proves hominids already ranged beyond eastern Africa; Bipedal (assumed)

Term

Australopithecus africanus

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Taung Baby"

South Africa

Dates: 3.5- 2.5 MYA

Traits: Relatively small brain with big forebrain, walked upright, prognathic face, lacks sagittal crest, low, flat forehead, low-vaulted braincase

Term

Paranthropus aethiopicus

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

Omo

Dates: 2.7-2.3 MYA

Traits: Sagittal crest, low forehead, extreme prognathism, grinding teeth, bipedalism

Term

Paranthropus boisei

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Zinj"/ "Nutcracker Man"

Tanzania

Dates: 2.3- 1.3 MYA

Traits: First member of human family found in Eastern Africa, Bipedal, longer arms and shorter legs than moder humans, small incisors/canines, huge grinding teeth, sagittal crest, low forehead, low-vaulted braincase

Term

Paranthropus robustus

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

Dates: 2.0- 1.0 MYA

 Traits: Wide, flat, dished face; sagittal crest; low, flat forehead; low-vaulted braincase; large grinding teeth; human life big toes; bipedalism

Term

Homo habilis

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Handyman"

Tanzania

 Dates: 2.0- 1.6 MYA

Traits: First direct ancestor of humans found in eastern Africs. Showed increase in brain size and smaller chewing molars that australopithecines; somewhat prognathic face; no sagittal crest; narrower grinding teeth thatn H. rudolfensis; bipedal; FIRST TOOLMAKER; no speech yet; some believe its a more direct ancestor than H. rudolfensis

Term

Homo rudolfensis

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

Dates: 2.4- 1.6 MYA

Traits: Flat face, no brow ridge or sagittal crest; broader grinding teeth that H. habilis; feet more like those of later humans than H. habilis; bipedal; more specialized than H. habilis

Term

Homo erectus

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

"Java Man" "Peking Man"

Dates: 1.9 MYA- 27,000 yBP

Traits: First fossil of early hominid, suggested Asian origin for humankind; Acheulean tools; bipedal; hunter-gatherers; sagittal keeling, large brow ridges, long and low-vaulted braincase

Term

Homo heidelbergensis

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

Zambia 

Dates: 800,000- 100,000 yBP

Traits: Higher cranial vault; less prognathic face; similar but smaller teeth to H. erectus; modern arm and leg proportions; bipedal;

Term

Homo neanderthalensis

 

Dates:

Traits:

 

Definition

Dates: 300,000- 30,000 yBP

Traits: large nose, midfacial prognathism, large incisors, lack of chin; robust and stocky, short legs, powerful hands, bipedal; ranged throughout Europe, DID NOT GIVE RISE TO MODERN HUMANS, could probablly talk, practice religion/ritual, maybe art and music, buried dead

Term

Homo sapiens

 

Dates:

Traits:

Definition

Dates: 130,000 yBP- present

Traits: Early H. sapiens (cro magnon) found in cave in 1868, relatively long legs and short arms overall, body varies with climactic conditions, omnivorous, smaller front and rear teeth, lightly built jaws, definite chin, high vaulted globular skull, small brows, high forehead, little facial prognathism

Supporting users have an ad free experience!