๐Ÿ›๏ธ Anthropology · Physical

Anthropology tricks that make human evolution stick

Human evolution, primatology, and skeletal biology โ€” memorized.

๐Ÿฆด Physical Anthropology

Memory tricks

Proven mnemonics — fast to learn, hard to forget.

Bipedalism Before Big Brains
Bipedalism came FIRST (~4 mya). Encephalization came LATER (~2 mya). Walking upright โ‰  big brain.
Bipedalism Before Encephalization
The evolutionary sequence that overturned a century of assumptions
Australopithecines: fully bipedal (Laetoli footprints, 3.6 mya) but had chimp-sized brains (~450cc). Bipedalism advantages: frees hands for tools, efficient long-distance travel, thermoregulation in savanna heat. Costs: slower running, difficult childbirth (obstetric dilemma). Encephalization: brain tripled in size from H. habilis to H. sapiens โ€” driven by diet (meat, cooking), social complexity, tool use.
Primate Characteristics
Primate traits: grasping hands, forward-facing eyes, large brain, long infant dependency, complex social life.
Primate Defining Traits
Five key characteristics shared by all primates โ€” including humans
Grasping hands/feet: nails not claws, opposable digits, tactile pads. Binocular vision: forward-facing eyes โ†’ depth perception โ†’ important for arboreal life. Relatively large brain. Extended infant dependency: slow life history = more learning time. Complex social groups. Primates: prosimians (lemurs, lorises, tarsiers), New World monkeys, Old World monkeys, apes (gibbons, orangutans, gorillas, chimps, humans). Humans share 98.7% DNA with chimpanzees.
Out of Africa Model
Out of Africa: modern H. sapiens evolved in Africa (~300k ya), dispersed globally ~60โ€“70k ya, replacing other hominins.
Recent African Origin Model
The fossil and genetic evidence that modern humans originated in Africa
Fossil evidence: oldest H. sapiens at Jebel Irhoud, Morocco (~300,000 ya) and Omo Kibish, Ethiopia. Genetic evidence: mitochondrial DNA "Eve" ~150โ€“200k ya; Y-chromosome "Adam" ~300k ya โ€” all trace to Africa. Multiregional hypothesis (rejected): parallel evolution in multiple regions. Replacement vs assimilation: some interbreeding with Neanderthals and Denisovans occurred outside Africa. Bottleneck: genetic diversity decreases with distance from Africa.
Neanderthals
Neanderthal DNA: 1โ€“4% of non-African human genomes. Pรครคbo sequenced genome (2010 Nobel). "We are part Neanderthal."
Homo neanderthalensis
Modern humans and Neanderthals interbred โ€” we carry their DNA today
Neanderthals: Europe and western Asia, ~400,000โ€“40,000 ya. Adaptations: stocky build for cold, large nasal passages, supraorbital torus. Brain size: equal to or larger than H. sapiens (~1,500cc). Mousterian tools. Evidence of culture: ochre use, feather ornaments, burial of dead (Shanidar). Svante Pรครคbo: ancient DNA revolution โ€” Neanderthal genome sequenced 2010 (Nobel Prize 2022). Non-African humans carry 1โ€“4% Neanderthal DNA.
Natural Selection Mechanisms
Evolution forces: SMAG โ€” Selection, Mutation, genetic drift (random), And Gene flow. Selection is the only directional force.
Four Evolutionary Forces
The four mechanisms that change allele frequencies in populations over time
Natural selection: differential reproductive success based on heritable traits โ€” the only directional force. Mutation: ultimate source of new variation โ€” random, mostly neutral or harmful. Genetic drift: random allele frequency changes โ€” strongest in small populations. Founder effect: small founding group โ†’ limited diversity (Amish, island populations). Gene flow: movement of alleles between populations โ€” reduces differentiation. All four operate simultaneously in human populations.
Selection
Differential reproduction โ€” directional
Mutation
New variation โ€” random, mostly neutral
Drift
Random changes โ€” strongest in small populations
Gene flow
Allele movement between populations
Human Biological Variation
"Race" is a social construct โ€” not a biological reality. Human genetic variation is clinal, not clustered into discrete races.
Human Biological Variation
Why biological anthropologists reject the concept of biological races in humans
All humans share ~99.9% of DNA. More genetic variation within "racial" groups than between them (Lewontin, 1972). Skin color: adaptation to UV radiation โ€” continuous (clinal) variation, not discrete categories. Sickle cell: follows malaria distribution, not "race." AAA Statement on Race (1998): race is a cultural/political/social phenomenon, not biological. Health disparities attributed to "race" actually reflect racism (stress, access, environment).
Primatology and Social Behavior
Primate social structures: solitary, pair-bonded, one-male groups, multi-male/multi-female. Reflect ecology, not fixed biology.
Primate Social Organization
The diversity of primate social systems โ€” and what they tell us about human evolution
Jane Goodall (Gombe): chimps โ€” tool use, warfare, hunting, social politics. Dian Fossey: mountain gorillas โ€” one-male (silverback) groups, stable families. Bonobos (de Waal): female-dominated, use sex to reduce conflict โ€” feminist primatology. Grooming: social bonding function beyond hygiene. Dunbar's number (~150): neocortex size predicts social group size. Chimpanzees and bonobos: our closest living relatives, ~98.7% shared DNA.
Paleoanthropology Methods
Paleoanthropology: finds fossils, dates them, interprets anatomy + behavior. "Where, When, Who, What did they do?"
Paleoanthropology Methods
How scientists reconstruct the lives of ancient human ancestors from bones and stones
Survey and excavation: Rift Valley (East Africa), Dmanisi (Georgia), Atapuerca (Spain). Dating: K-Ar, Ar-Ar for volcanic layers; C-14 for recent hominins; U-series for teeth and bones. Morphological analysis: cladistics โ€” shared derived characters define taxa. Paleoneurology: endocasts reveal brain organization. Ancient DNA (aDNA): revolutionized understanding โ€” Denisovans discovered only from a finger bone's DNA. Isotope analysis: diet and migration from tooth enamel.
Human Life History
Human life history is uniquely slow: long childhood, menopause, grandmothering. "K-selected" โ€” few offspring, heavy investment.
Human Life History Theory
Humans have the slowest life history of any primate โ€” and for good evolutionary reasons
Life history: timing of growth, reproduction, and death. Humans: slow growth, prolonged juvenile period (learning), late first reproduction, menopause (unique among primates), post-reproductive lifespan. Grandmother hypothesis (Hawkes): post-menopausal grandmothers provision grandchildren โ†’ increased survival โ†’ selected for long lifespan. Trade-offs: large brain requires long development. Alloparenting: cooperative child-rearing enables human brain size and life history.
Forensic Anthropology
Forensic anthropology: identify unknown skeletal remains for law enforcement and human rights investigations.
Forensic Anthropology
Applying skeletal biology to legal and humanitarian investigations
Biological profile: estimate age, sex, stature, ancestry from skeletal remains. Age: epiphyseal union (young adults), pubic symphysis morphology, dental wear (older adults). Sex: pelvis (most reliable โ€” obstetric adaptation), skull robustness. Stature: long bone length regression formulas. Trauma analysis: distinguishes perimortem (at death) from postmortem damage. Mass grave investigations: ICMP (International Commission on Missing Persons), WGEID. Clyde Snow pioneered human rights forensic work in Argentina (dirty war victims).
Behavioral Modernity
Behavioral modernity: symbolic thought, art, complex language, long-distance trade. Appears ~70โ€“40k ya โ€” "Upper Paleolithic Revolution."
Behavioral Modernity
When and why humans began behaving in distinctly modern ways
Anatomically modern humans: ~300,000 ya. Behaviorally modern: evidence clusters ~70,000โ€“40,000 ya. Markers: cave art (Lascaux, Chauvet ~36k ya), personal ornaments (shell beads ~100k ya in Africa), ochre use, long-distance trade networks, hafted composite tools, symbolic burial. Blombos Cave (South Africa): ochre engravings ~75k ya โ€” possible earlier behavioral modernity. "Revolution" vs gradual emergence debate ongoing.