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2.0.6 How People Began: Primatology - OverviewVersion 1.3 March 2013 (Previous Version) ( Paragraph 1 Trans Error: Unknown )There is almost a consensus among scientists as to how humans evolved. ( Paragraph 2 Trans Error: Unknown )Between 4 and 7 million years ago in Africa, chimpanzees, bonobos and humans (hominids) split from our common ancestor, tree dwelling fruit eaters who supplemented their diet with meat. ( Paragraph 3 Trans Error: Unknown )· When the climate warmed the forest turned into grasslands, meaning survival rates were increased by the ability to stand on the back legs to see predators and game over the tall grass. ( Paragraph 4 Trans Error: Unknown )· Predators such as big cats can't run long distances – they overheat and frequently tire before the game. Hominids who could lose heat, by having more sweat glands and less body hair (and darker skin to avoid sunburn), could run longer distances to tire out game, and survived better. ( Paragraph 5 Trans Error: Unknown )· Humans survived by cooperating and using tools in hunting and gathering plant food. ( Paragraph 6 Trans Error: Unknown )· Humans also survived because their brains were not just bigger but more complex, with more layers of neurons that enable greater degrees of abstraction and sophistication. ( Paragraph 7 Trans Error: Unknown )· Like bonobos, early humans mated face to face, so, compared to apes, males with bigger penises were more likely to have children. As humans lost body hair, suckling infants survived better if they could clutch, compared to apes, more fatty breast tissue around mother’s nipples. ( Paragraph 8 Trans Error: Unknown )· Human survival depended on our intelligence, cooperation, tool use, running, language and culture – not on gender differences. Despite our different genitalia, men and women, compared to most other species, are more similar in body size. Though men are mostly (but not always) bigger and stronger than women, and women mostly (but not always) have greater verbal skills than men, both sexes have essentially the same physical dexterity, stamina and mental ability. ( Paragraph 9 Trans Error: Unknown )· Some early humans spread out of Africa into Eurasia. Some speculate that humans evolved further in Eurasia and these species also spread back to Africa. Our species, homo sapiens sapiens, probably evolved in Africa, spread into Eurasia, and overcame the earlier species. ( Paragraph 10 Trans Error: Unknown )· As humans moved away from the equator into colder climates where the sunlight was less intense, those with lighter skin produced more vitamin D, those with narrower eyes and shorter noses got less frostbite, and were more likely to survive, producing the superficial racial difference we see now, especially in our skin colour and faces. ( Paragraph 11 Trans Error: Unknown )
Apes in East Africa evolved into a variety of early humans, walking upright, with little hair, opposable thumbs, big brains, sexes that were similar in stamina and ability, using tools for hunting and gathering; who spread over Africa and Eurasia, but these early humans were eventually replaced by homo sapiens sapiens – us. ( Paragraph 14 Trans Error: Unknown )more Statement 12 ( Paragraph 15 Trans Error: Unknown )This story reinforces our choice to value diversity by emphasizing that: ( Paragraph 16 Trans Error: Unknown )· Supposed racial differences aren’t based on significant genetic differences: the variation between random individuals of the same “race” is greater than the difference between people of different races. ( Paragraph 17 Trans Error: Unknown )· Both sexes were essential to food production and our survival: both sexes are equal. ( Paragraph 18 Trans Error: Unknown )This story shows there is no need for supernatural explanations of how we came to be as we are. ( Paragraph 19 Trans Error: Unknown )
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Reconocemos a los propietarios y custodios tradicionales del territorio, en todas las tierras colonizadas, y sus vínculos con la tierra, las aguas y la comunidad. Rendimos homenaje a estos pueblos dando voz a la verdad, los valores y la justicia social, reconociendo nuestra historia compartida y valorando las culturas de los pueblos originarios.
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