BECOMING HUMAN - Transcript 2
BECOMING HUMAN - Transcript 2
BECOMING HUMAN - Transcript 2
What is it that makes us human? That gives us the ability to reflect on the past and ponder
the future? Who we are as a species and where we came from make up the basis of a
fantastic story, spanning more than 4 million years.
I’m Don Johanson, and I’m one of the many researchers dedicated to discovering and
interpreting the evidence for human origins. Evidence that provides the framework for the
human story. It’s a story that begins in Africa, where our ancestors first stood up. Over
millions of years they continued to evolve and eventually spread out across the globe. Some
species adapted to the changing world while others went extinct. Today only a single
species of humans survives. That species flourished because they developed a culture, a
culture more complex than has ever been seen before. This is their story, this is our story.
1
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Next section of the documentary: Evidence
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Hadar
In 1973 I made my first fossil hominid discovery; a knee joint. The specimen came from a
geological stratum dated to nearly 3.4 million years. Detail study of the functional anatomy of
the knee showed beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was a creature that walked upright - a
hominid. Then in 1974 we returned to Hadar and in late November, near the end of the field
season, I made a discovery that firmly placed Hadar on the map as one of the most
significant hominoid fossil sites in the world
2
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Lucy
Her discovery did indeed open up a major new window in the study of human origins. Until
the discovery of Lucy there were few hominid discoveries dating back to more than 3 million
years. So Lucy at 3.2 million years now offered many new insights to our ancestral past.
Because of her unique anatomy we dubbed her and the other Hadar fossils a new species;
Australopithecus afarensis. Australopithecus means “southern ape” and afarensis
celebrates the Afar people in the region were Lucy was discovered. In terms of her
relationship to other hominid species, we suggested that afarensis was the last common
ancestor to all later branches to human evolution.
Although today more complete skeletons and older fossils have been found, Lucy remains
the benchmark by which all other human ancestors’ fossil discoveries are judged. She was
the ape that stood up and as it turned out the woman who shook up man’s family tree all
rolled into one spectacular find.
In many ways she led the research in Ethiopia. She provided the catalyst for other
expeditions which continue to uncover an ever increasing number of important hominid fossil
finds, assuring Ethiopia’s critical role in understanding human origins. It seems that no
matter what we find, Lucy continues to be an extraordinarily important discovery in human
evolutionary studies.
3
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Reconstructing Environments
5
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Next section of the documentary: Anatomy
As we journey back in time, our ancestors begin to look less like us and more and more ape
like. The fossil record gives important clues about where we come from. Eight million years
ago, a period known as the Miocene a major portion of the continent was covered in lush
forests. A great diversity of apes thrived in these forests, feeding sleeping and easily
navigating this world above ground.
Evolutionary adaptation in their anatomy such as grasping toes and joint mobility and
arms and shoulders made the apes extremely successful animals in the arboreal
environment. But beginning about 6 million years ago the world became a much drier and
colder place. The African forests, home to the Miocene apes started to thin and were
gradually replaced by open woodlands. Although most of the ape species went extinct, in
time a few started to adapt to the new environment. One species that survived was a
common ancestor of the African apes and humans
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Unearthed in 1978 by Mary Leakey and her excavation team, the Laetoli foot prints are
unique and dramatic evidence for one of the defining characters of being a hominid -
bipedalism. Walking upright requires a unique set of anatomically correct features and one
of the obvious features is the human foot. Unlike chimps who have a divergent big toe used
for grasping, the human big toe is aligned with the other toes and helps to propel the body
forward. The human condition is clearly preserved in the Latolii foot prints. To better
understand the origins of upright walking we need to look even deeper into our ancestral
past. Nina Jablonski at the California Academy of Sciences is a paleoanthropologist who
studies bipedalism.
7
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Turkana Boy
The brain size, - body size is interesting because the large brain is one of the hallmarks
of ourselves. It turns out the easiest way to get a big brain is to get a big body. Brain
size and body size are a intricately linked and it is a complicated linkage.
In 1984, in Lake Turkana in northern Kenya Allen Walker and Richard Leekey uncovered
the most complete fossil skeleton of homo erectus ever found. Dated roughly at almost one
and a half million years, this is the skeleton of a young male, probably about 9 years-old.
Nicknamed the Turkana Boy he stood about five feet four inches but as an adult he would
have been at least six feet tall.
Homo erectus not only had big brains they had big bodies and the stuff they left on the
archeological sites shows us that they were eating animals. We suspect they were catching
them too. There are consequences to becoming a carnivore. Carnivores eat meat and meat is
meat where ever it is found. Were as herbivores eat plants and individual herbivores species
are matched in their plant community. Carnivores aren’t like that. Carnivores have huge home
ranges so Homo erectus is pushing its own range further and further away from the ancestral
home range by little territorial increments. And the pressure that pushes it is number of Homo
erectus that are still there in the ancestral homeland. This is not a migration in the sense that
song birds might migrate south in the winter this is a dispersal of a species.
About a million and a half years ago, Homo erectus left Africa and began to populate the rest
of the globe. In a sense, Homo erectus was the evolutionary parent of our own species.
They carried with them not only advances and cultures but indelible assets began with our
earliest ancestors. With a bold confident stride, Hhomo erectus crossed the threshold into a
new world.
8
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
12
Next section of the documentary: Lineages
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Cave Man
[Note to readers: the fossils discussed below were found in the Neander
Valley in Germany. “thal” is the German word for “valley” but the “h” is silent.
Thus, the word Neanderthal” is pronounced NE-AN-DER-TAL]
Geologist William King recognized the distinct anatomy of the specimen from the skull cap.
Even without facial bones he decided that these fossils fell outside the of range modern
humans. In 1864, King named this species, Homo neaderthalenis. When you say the word
Neanderthal, people automatically picture a brutish cave man shuffling around with his knees
bent holding a club. Yet it would be wrong to think of the Neanderthals as a primitive, less
evolved version of modern humans. For over 200,000 years, they were a well adapted,
successful species in their own right. They probably evolved in the cold, periglacial climate in
Europe which would remain the center of their range thanks to barriers of geology and
climate. During the 20th century dozens of sites across Europe and western Asia have
yielded hundreds of Neanderthal fossils. The relative isolation in this region allowed the
Neanderthals to evolve a unique set of behaviors and anatomy that sets them
distinctly apart from modern humans.
9
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Lineages
10
Not spoken but appearing as a title on the screen:
Extinction
11
Transcript
Becominghuman.org – The Documentary
Last section of the documentary: Culture
12
Voice of Don Johanson
Since many of the sites of considered sacred, Grove and her colleagues can not use
traditional dating method that might damage the art. Instead they use changes in artistic
style in the environment over the last fifty thousand years to date the art.
13
Voice of Michel Lorblanchet
The breath is probably, I think, the most important part of the human being and the artist by
spitting the paint is projecting himself onto the rock face and during this action he became
the horse, he was transformed into a horse.
end of transcript
Prepared by Jay Greene,Tanya Georgevich and Maria Paulina Greene, May 2007 [corrected
by JJG January 2011], as an aid in following the documentary Becoming Human. This material
may be used for this purpose only and may not be quoted, or used in any other way than as an
aid, without the written permission of Webmaster of BecomingHuman.org. Go to http://
www.becominghuman.org/ and click on Contact Us; send an email requesting
permission.
14