CYBERSPACE INFORMATIONAL GUIDE

ASM104 Introduction to

Biological Anthropology

Mesa Community College

 The Nature of Things

 Explore Natural Selection

 Role of the Environment

 What Makes a Species?

 Exploration of Principles of Basic Genetics

 Basic Introduction to Human Anatomy and Anthropometry

   The concepts of Random Model, Different Rules Model and Punctuated Equilibrium can be applied to the real world: Exploration

 

 

VARIATION -- SO WHAT IS RACE?

 HUMAN VARIANCE: Understanding Racial Classification

 

 Reflect on the following by Jared Diamond: (This is taken from The Third Chimpanzee: the evolution and future of the human animal.; Pages 110 to 121) 

Sexual Selection and the Origin of Human Races

 


- Who are they? OR How Similar Are They?

- Origins of Bipedality, Scavenging, and alternatives to our kind (links to the Hominid Journey)

Larger Brains - More Intelligence? What Makes Us So Smart? Or Are We?

EXPLORE STONE TOOLS AND PALEOLITHIC TECHNOLOGIES

 


The Reconstruction at Koobi Fora

The process of reconstructing the hominid fossil record involves knowledge of Paleoanthropology as well as Archaeology. Places like Oduvai Gorge or Koobi Fora are famous for yield traces of hominid fossils and early traces of stone tools. Paleoanthropology aims to help us understand the nature of hominids by looking at the skeletal and dental fragments. Through Paleoanthropolgy we can learn about the development of bipedality, diet, signs of wear or disease on the skeleton, and even the possible cause of death in some cases. Archaeology seeks to interpret the material evidence that hominids left. Clues to the lives of vanished people can take many forms: ruins of a deserted city, a single spear point, wear on teeth that indicate diet or use, pieces of broken pottery, or remnants of an extant script. Probably most important to recognize is that archaeologists try to understand why human culture has changed over time. We will seek to understand how archaeology adds to our story of proto-humans and humans. The following simulation also enables you to explore how paleoanthropologists actually date fossil and archaeological finds along with how they search for patterns that help them understand the record of the past.

EXERCISE IN REAL LIFE: KOOBI FORA SIMULATION


INTRODUCTION TO ARCHAEOLOGY

Archaeology is about material culture - the things that people use to adapt to the world around them. Archaeology is about anthropology - the study of humankind. Archaeology is more than "things" in a museum or "things" that are necessarily old. These "things" are part of people's material culture and they can tell us how people used them and in what context these and other parts of the material culture played in their lives. Archaeologists ponder the things left behind by peoples who lived and died through almost two million years of human existence. These material remains are called artifacts and features. It is artifacts and features that help archaeologists reconstruct the hows and whys of people's lives. 

Reading on Archaeology

MCC Multimedia Introduction to Archaeology


Emergence of Archaic Homo Sapiens, Neandertal and Modern Homo Sapiens and the Development of More Complex Lifeways

 

Revisit the  to learn more about the story of human evolution

 


This image of a man from New Guinea may appear somewhat strange to us. However, humans are prone to "statements" about themselves. This is a human awareness factor. Consider the implications of prehistoric art and jewelry.  

Read the following passage taken from Richard Leakey's book Origin's Reconsidered. (Pages 328-335) (Pages 295-309)

Exploration of Cave Art

 

Consider the following reading (also see that of Geoffrey Pope). This is modified version of a recent paper by Henry Harpending, Stephen Sherry, Alan Rogers and Mark Stoneking (Current Anthropology 1993 pages 483-496) entitled The Genetic Structure of Ancient Human Populations. Read your text to explore the nature of change in technology that occurred in the Upper Paleolithic period.

Handbook of Human Symbolic Evolution - chapter summaries


 Simple to Complex 

Reflect on the following: .....I believe there is a general law: complexity tends to increase .... by W. Brian Arthur, Scientific American May 1993 Page. 144

 A Scientific Debate - Changing Paradigms

More on Larger Brains: what does it mean anyway?


In the last phases of human evolution, human capacity to adapt to environmental changes (the end of an ice-box phase of the glacial age and the subsequent extinction of large animals) was evident. Consider the following brief overview of the changes that transpired in Turkey and Mesopotamia between 12,000 and 4,000 years ago.

Ponder the following

 

 

 Papal Statement on evolution

 

 Demographic Simulation

This simulation requires Java capacity for your browser.


FINAL SYNTHESIS:

©1995 MCC Anthropology

Revised May 2002