Please write the answer with long sentences like essay form. Thank you. The open
ID: 165238 • Letter: P
Question
Please write the answer with long sentences like essay form. Thank you.
The opening sequence of 2001, A Space Odyssey, presents a "Hollywood" explanation for the transformation that sent ancient apes on an evolutionary path culminating with us, fully modern Homo sapiens capable of space travel (and a whole lot more). Develop an overview of what actually happened at each of the five major transformations in the evolution of the human lineage (Liberman's Transitions One through Five listed on page 18 of the SHB text and as headings below). Handwrite your answers (bullet points, essays, etc.) to the question on the three sheets provided (front and back is OK). Limit attachments to two extra pages of drawings, illustrations, etc. Refer to your class lecture and video notes, handouts, and texts, especially Making Sense of Life, Ch. Program (humanoriginssi.edu) Watch out for creationist web-sites these can be tricky to spot but can mess up your project Early member of the genus Homo (Homo erectus or Homo ergaster) that had evolved nearly modern human bodies and somewhat larger brains that enabled them to become the first hunter-gatherers Archaic human hunter-gatherers flourished, evolved even bigger brains, more slowly growing bodies, and spread across the Old World,Explanation / Answer
The early member of genus homo includes monkeys and early man.They had bigger brains.The early species included the the famous Lucy fossil which is called as the Australopithecus afarensis.This species had skulls with internal volumes of between 400 and 550 milliliters.On the other hand chimpanzee skulls hold around 400 ml .Another is the evolution of gorillas with skul sbetween 500 and 700 ml. This led to the fact that Australopithecine brains began to show the various subtle changes in structure and shape as compared with apes. The major difference was the fact the the neocortex had begun to expand.It also started reorganizing its functions away from visual processing and the brains kept becoming smaller and smaller with generations.