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  2. Evolution of human intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Evolution_of_human_intelligence

    The evolution of human intelligence is closely tied to the evolution of the human brain and to the origin of language. The timeline of human evolution spans approximately seven million years, [ 1 ] from the separation of the genus Pan until the emergence of behavioral modernity by 50,000 years ago.

  3. Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catching_Fire:_How_Cooking...

    Wrangham also argues that cooking and control of fire generally affected species development by providing warmth and helping to fend off predators, which helped human ancestors adapt to a ground-based lifestyle. Wrangham points out that humans are highly evolved for eating cooked food and cannot maintain reproductive fitness with raw food. [3]

  4. Pleistocene human diet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleistocene_human_diet

    Evolutionary anthropologists who study the evolution of human origins and diet use a variety of methods to determine what human ancestors ate. As a starting point comparative analysis of the diets of humans closest living relatives, great apes such as chimpanzees, bonobos and other great apes, though these comparison are limited. Through ...

  5. Evolutionary models of food sharing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_models_of...

    Humans evolved from chimp-like ancestors with a similar hierarchical social structure (i.e., open dominance hierarchy that is male-dominated) Males were highly motivated to achieve high rank. The short term reward of this was the position itself and the long-term reward was reproductive success, which resulted from greater access to mates with ...

  6. Timeline of human evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_human_evolution

    A secondary palate enables the animal to eat and breathe at the same time and is a sign of a more active, perhaps warm-blooded, way of life. [21] They had lost gastralia and, possibly, scales. 260-230 Ma Cynognathus. One subgroup of therapsids, the cynodonts, lose pineal eye and lumbar ribs and very likely became warm-blooded.

  7. Expensive tissue hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expensive_Tissue_Hypothesis

    The expensive tissue hypothesis (ETH) relates brain and gut size in evolution (specifically in human evolution).It suggests that in order for an organism to evolve a large brain without a significant increase in basal metabolic rate (as seen in humans), the organism must use less energy on other expensive tissues; the paper introducing the ETH suggests that in humans, this was achieved by ...

  8. If Humans Die Out, Octopuses Already Have the Chops to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/humans-die-octopuses...

    The kind of intelligence that makes this possible is a little different from how we imagine human intelligence, says Andy Dobson, Ph.D., professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton ...

  9. Homo heidelbergensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_heidelbergensis

    The human body plan had evolved in H. ergaster, and characterises all later Homo species, but among the more derived members there are two distinct morphs: A narrow-chested and gracile build like modern humans, and a broader-chested and robust build like Neanderthals.