EPISODE · Mar 31, 2015 · 22 MIN
CARTA: Behaviorally Modern Humans: The Origin of Us – Alison S. Brooks: East African Archaeological Evidence
from CARTA - Anthropogeny (Audio) · host UCTV: UC San Diego
Apart from references to the oldest fossil hominins attributed to Homo sapiens, the East African record is often ignored in current scenarios of modern human origins in favor of the much more detailed, well-preserved and better-explored region at the southern end of the continent. Alison S. Brooks (George Washington Univ/Smithsonian Institution) opines that over 20 years of research in the eastern and south-central African zones of woodlands and savannas surrounding the central African rainforest have produced new evidence concerning the transition from pre-sapiens behavior to behaviors more characteristic of the Late Pleistocene humans who expanded from Africa and replaced the pre-existing populations of Eurasia. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Show ID: 25391]
What this episode covers
Apart from references to the oldest fossil hominins attributed to Homo sapiens, the East African record is often ignored in current scenarios of modern human origins in favor of the much more detailed, well-preserved and better-explored region at the southern end of the continent. Alison S. Brooks (George Washington Univ/Smithsonian Institution) opines that over 20 years of research in the eastern and south-central African zones of woodlands and savannas surrounding the central African rainforest have produced new evidence concerning the transition from pre-sapiens behavior to behaviors more characteristic of the Late Pleistocene humans who expanded from Africa and replaced the pre-existing populations of Eurasia. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Show ID: 25391]
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CARTA: Behaviorally Modern Humans: The Origin of Us – Alison S. Brooks: East African Archaeological Evidence
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