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The origins and early evolution of modern humans in southern Tanzania

Thursday September 19, 2013
5:00 pm


 Presenter:  Pamela R. Willoughby , Professor
University of Alberta, Canada.
 Series:  Sigma Xi Public Talk
 Abstract:  Over the past two decades, genetic, palaeo-ontological and archaeological research has confirmed that the earliest members of our own species, Homo sapiens, evolved in Africa around 200,000 years ago, during the Middle Stone Age.

Their descendants spread out of the continent around 50,000 years ago, interbred with the indigenous Neanderthals and Denisovans of Eurasia, and ultimately populated the globe.  By this time, they had developed a much more complex material culture, which includes the earliest examples of jewelry, organic tools, art, and more complex burials.  Newly discovered archaeological sites in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania have produced a long record of human occupation, possibly spanning the last 300,000 years.  One may also include evidence of human survival during the genetic bottleneck which almost led to our extinction.  These sites offer an important case study of how early hominids became both biologically and culturally modern, and what might have triggered the "out of Africa" dispersal.  
 Host:  Harjit Ahluwalia
 Location:  Room C, UNM Conference Center

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