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Human Evolution

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Estimated time: 14 minutes
CBSE: Class 12
Maharashtra State Board: Class 12

Human Evolution

  • Human evolution is traced from a tree-dwelling, shrew-like ancestor, and the process is stated to have begun in the Palaeocene epoch.
  • As forests declined, arboreal mammals were forced to adapt to life on land, which became an important driving force in this transition.
  • Humans are described as being most closely related to gibbons, chimpanzees, and gorillas.
CBSE: Class 12
Maharashtra State Board: Class 12

Main evolutionary changes

  • Major changes in the transition from ape to man included increased brain size and complexity, greater intelligence, increased cranial capacity, bipedal locomotion, an opposable thumb, and an erect posture.
  • Other important changes included shortening of the forelimbs, lengthening of the hind limbs, broadening of the pelvic girdle, development of lumbar curvature, and development of the chin and forehead.
  • Social and cultural development also became important, including articulated speech, art, and tool development.
  • An increase in cranial capacity over time, especially the enlargement of the frontal region, supported the development of a high forehead.
CBSE: Class 12
Maharashtra State Board: Class 12

Functional significance

  • Freedom of the forelimbs from locomotion and the presence of an opposable thumb improved the use of hands for holding objects and developing motor skills.
  • Bipedal locomotion, upright posture, and stereoscopic vision helped humans move more safely on land.
  • The evolutionary history of humans was traced using fossil remains discovered over time.
CBSE: Class 12
Maharashtra State Board: Class 12

Stages in sequence

Time Period Stage / Ancestor Key Features
~15 mya Dryopithecus & Ramapithecus Dryopithecus more ape-like; Ramapithecus more man-like
3–4 mya Man-like primates (Ethiopia, Tanzania) Walked upright in East Africa; not taller than 4 feet
~2 mya Australopithecines Lived in East African grasslands; hunted with stone tools; mainly ate fruits
~2 mya Homo habilis First human-like hominid; brain 650–800 cc; little or no meat in diet
~1.5 mya (Java, 1891) Homo erectus Brain ~900 cc; probably ate meat
100,000–40,000 ya Neanderthal man Brain ~1400 cc; lived in Near East & Central Asia; used hides; buried the dead
75,000–10,000 ya Homo sapiens (modern man) Arose in Africa during the ice age; spread across continents; developed distinct races
~18,000 ya Prehistoric cave art Example: Bhimbetka rock shelter, M.P.
~10,000 ya Agriculture & settlements Beginning of human civilisation
CBSE: Class 12
Maharashtra State Board: Class 10, 12
CISCE: Class 10

Key Points: Human Evolution

  • Origin: human evolution began in the Palaeocene epoch from a tree-dwelling, shrew-like ancestor.
  • As forests declined, arboreal mammals were forced to adapt to life on land, an important driving force in human evolution.
  • Humans are most closely related to gibbons, chimpanzees, and gorillas.
  • Major changes: increase in brain size and cranial capacity, bipedal locomotion, opposable thumb, erect posture, and development of chin and forehead.
  • Functional significance: free forelimbs and opposable thumbs aided tool use, while bipedal locomotion and stereoscopic vision improved movement and survival.
  • Early ancestors: Dryopithecus (ape-like) and Ramapithecus (man-like) lived ~15 mya.
  • Australopithecines (~2 mya) lived in East African grasslands, hunted with stone tools, but ate mainly fruits.
  • Homo habilis - first hominid, brain ~650–800 cc, with little or no meat in diet; Homo erectus (~1.5 mya, Java, brain ~900 cc) probably ate meat.
  • Neanderthal man (~1400 cc, 100,000–40,000 years ago) used hides for protection and buried the dead.
  • Modern humans: Homo sapiens arose in Africa during the ice age, spread worldwide; cave art developed ~18,000 years ago (Bhimbetka, M.P.), and agriculture and settlements began ~10,000 years ago.

Video Tutorials

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Shaalaa.com | Heredity and evolution part 19 (Human evolution & Questions)

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Heredity and evolution part 19 (Human evolution & Questions) [00:14:31]
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