Homo habilis Postcrania
Transcription
Homo habilis Postcrania
Homo habilis Comparison to Australopithecines q “handy man” q Found in East & South Africa q Same deposits as Zinj, found by Leakeys q Lived about 2 mya q Close enough to us to be in our lineage q Contemporary of robust Australopithecines Postcrania w Reduction in cheek tooth size (posterior dentition) w Smaller face w No saggittal crest w Increased cranial size Reconstruction p Shorter toes h about 4’5” tall h maintains significant sexual dimorphism h a great deal of variation, perhaps more than one species p More dexterity in thumb h 500-830 cc p Long forelimbs h ~2.5 - 1.5 mya p Not much to work with p Bigger femoral head than australopithecines p Pelvis a bit more flared Olduwan Tools o 1st credited to A. boisei o reason for “habilis” o cut marks on animal bones o crude choppers o scrapers o transported o scavenging Scavenging Hunting vs. Scavenging Lewis Binford -W Majority of bones are lower extremeties W Left after carnivore feasts W Tools are work well for getting a marrow cavity Pat Shipman -W Microscopic cut marks W Carnivore tooth marks over cut marks Gathering A. Robustus & H. Habilis N Adaptive experiments N Open woodlands & savannas of Africa N Environment changes N Not enough room for 3 upright hominids N Pushed into more marginal environments N More generalized anatomy succeeds N No need for violent confrontation in this scheme N Ecological competition, environmental change N Robust australopithecines were successful W Cut marks not at the joints W Omnivore dental wear patterns