World history - Human Evolution and Prehistory
Understand human evolution from early hominins to modern Homo sapiens, their global migrations, and the transformative shift to agriculture and early urban societies.
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Where did modern humans first evolve approximately 300,000 years ago?
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Summary
Prehistory: Human Origins and Early Civilization
Understanding Prehistory
Prehistory refers to the long period of human existence before the development of written records. This era spans hundreds of thousands of years and encompasses the most profound transformations in human biology, behavior, and social organization. Understanding prehistory requires knowledge of human evolution, early human behavior, and the transition from hunting-gathering to agricultural societies. This foundation is essential for understanding all subsequent human history.
The Evolution of Humans
Human Origins in Africa
Modern humans—Homo sapiens—evolved in Africa approximately 300,000 years ago from earlier hominin ancestors. The term "hominin" refers to human-like primates that are more closely related to modern humans than to our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos. This African origin of humanity is one of the most firmly established facts in biological science.
The evolutionary path to modern humans was not a simple, linear progression. Rather, it involved numerous hominin species living over millions of years, some of which were our direct ancestors while others were evolutionary cousins that eventually died out.
The Key Innovation: Bipedalism
One of the earliest and most important adaptations distinguishing hominins from other primates was bipedalism—the ability to walk upright on two legs. While other primates can briefly stand on two legs, hominins developed the anatomical features to make bipedalism their primary means of movement. This adaptation had profound consequences: upright walking freed the hands for carrying tools and food, allowed for better visibility across open grasslands, and eventually enabled the development of tool use.
The Rise of Tool-Making
The earliest evidence of stone tool-making dates to approximately 3.3 million years ago, marking the beginning of what archaeologists call the Paleolithic era (or Old Stone Age). These early tools were simple—sharp flakes knocked from stones—but they represented a major cognitive leap, requiring the ability to recognize which stones would fracture in useful ways and to plan ahead.
Key Hominin Species
From Australopithecus to Homo habilis
The genus Australopithecus existed from roughly 4 million to 2 million years ago and represents an early stage of hominin development. These creatures had bipedal walking but relatively small brains compared to modern humans.
The genus Homo—our own genus—emerged around 2.8 million years ago. The earliest known Homo fossil is a jawbone from Ethiopia dating to approximately 2.8 million years ago. Homo habilis, which appeared around 2.3 million years ago, showed a significant advancement: a brain size about 50% larger than Australopithecus. This larger brain correlated with improved tool-making abilities, hence the species name "habilis," meaning "handy" or "skillful."
Homo erectus: The First Global Traveler
Homo erectus emerged approximately 2 million years ago and represented another major evolutionary step. Crucially, Homo erectus was the first hominin species to leave Africa and spread across Eurasia, establishing human presence in regions far beyond our species' birthplace. This dispersal demonstrates that early human species were capable of adapting to new environments and sustaining themselves in unfamiliar territories.
Fire and Cooking
By 400,000 years ago, hominins were regularly using fire for heat and cooking. This development was transformative. Cooking makes food more digestible and allows humans to consume a wider variety of foods. Fire also provided warmth, enabling humans to survive in colder climates, and it facilitated social gathering and communication. The control of fire represents a pivotal moment in human technological and social development.
The Emergence of Homo sapiens
Anatomical Modernity
Homo sapiens evolved in Africa around 300,000 years ago. However, anatomical modernity—the possession of the physical features characteristic of modern humans—did not develop until approximately 125,000 years ago. This distinction is important: early Homo sapiens had the basic body structure of modern humans but may have lacked some features (such as certain skull characteristics) that we associate with fully modern humans.
Behavioral Modernity
The most defining feature of Homo sapiens is behavioral modernity—the capacity for complex symbolic thought and abstract reasoning. Evidence for behavioral modernity appears in the archaeological record beginning around 100,000 years ago:
Burial practices: Humans began deliberately burying their dead, suggesting beliefs about an afterlife or at least respect for the deceased
Personal adornment: The wearing of jewelry indicates self-awareness and aesthetic expression
Ritual behavior: The use of red ochre on bodies suggests spiritual or ceremonial practices
Language as the Game-Changer
Perhaps the most significant development in human evolution was the emergence of syntactic language—language with grammar and the ability to express complex ideas through the combination of words. While earlier hominins certainly communicated, syntactic language allowed humans to discuss abstract concepts, plan for the future, and transmit knowledge across generations with precision. This linguistic ability dramatically enhanced human cognitive capabilities and social organization.
Paleolithic Lifestyle and Culture
Hunter-Gatherer Existence
Paleolithic humans were nomadic hunter-gatherers, meaning they obtained food by hunting wild animals and gathering wild plants rather than farming. This lifestyle required extensive knowledge of their environment, seasonal migration patterns, and careful management of resources. Despite their mobility, Paleolithic people were not primitives struggling for survival; they had sophisticated knowledge systems and often enjoyed considerable leisure time.
Artistic and Spiritual Expression
Archaeological evidence reveals that Paleolithic people engaged in artistic expression and had complex spiritual beliefs:
Cave paintings depict animals and, occasionally, human hands and abstract symbols
Sculptural works in ivory, stone, and bone demonstrate skilled craftsmanship and aesthetic vision
Spiritual beliefs appear to have centered on animism or shamanism—belief systems in which animals, natural phenomena, and spiritual forces held religious significance
These cultural artifacts show that Paleolithic humans possessed imaginative and symbolic thinking capacities.
Human Migration Out of Africa
The Question of When and How
Understanding human migration patterns is central to prehistoric history. For decades, scholars debated whether humans left Africa in a single migration or multiple waves. Current evidence supports the dominant scholarly view: all non-African peoples descend from a single successful out-of-Africa migration occurring between 70,000 and 50,000 years ago, though earlier migrations may have occurred between 194,000 and 177,000 years ago that did not successfully establish permanent populations outside Africa.
This map shows the major migration routes and dates when humans reached different regions.
The Global Dispersal
Once humans began migrating outward from Africa, they spread across the globe with remarkable speed (in archaeological terms):
Australia: By 65,000 years ago, humans had reached Australia, requiring sea travel and demonstrating advanced maritime capabilities
Europe: By 45,000 years ago, humans had arrived in Europe, where they encountered Neanderthals (an earlier hominin species) and eventually replaced them
The Americas: By 21,000 years ago, humans had entered the Americas, likely by crossing a land bridge (Beringia) that connected modern-day Siberia and Alaska during the Ice Age
Global coverage: By the end of the last Ice Age, approximately 12,000 years ago, humans inhabited nearly all ice-free regions of the globe
This represents one of the greatest achievements of early humanity: the ability to adapt to and colonize virtually every terrestrial environment on Earth.
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Interbreeding with Other Hominin Species
During this period of expansion, Homo sapiens encountered and interbred with other hominin species still living in Eurasia, including Homo heidelbergensis, Neanderthals, and Denisovans. These interactions produced hybrid populations, and modern humans today carry small percentages of Neanderthal and Denisovan DNA, particularly those of non-African descent. This evidence shows that the replacement of earlier hominin species was not simple extinction but involved some genetic mixing.
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The Neolithic Revolution: The Birth of Agriculture
The Transformation of Human Society
Around 10,000 BCE, one of the most significant transitions in human history occurred: the shift from hunting-gathering to agriculture. This Neolithic Revolution (or agricultural revolution) represents humanity's transition from the Paleolithic to the Neolithic era (New Stone Age). Unlike previous cultural changes, this transformation was so profound that it reorganized virtually every aspect of human life—settlement patterns, social organization, population size, and ultimately the structure of civilization itself.
The Beginnings of Farming
Agriculture did not develop in one place and spread outward. Instead, it arose independently in at least 11 different centers around the world, suggesting that once human populations reached a certain level of knowledge and density, agriculture was a logical development in multiple locations:
Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq/Syria region): Wheat and barley cultivation emerged around 8500 BCE
Yangtze River Valley (China): Rice cultivation developed around 8000–7000 BCE
Other centers emerged independently in Africa, India, Mesoamerica, South America, and other regions
This independent development demonstrates that agriculture was not a unique discovery of one brilliant culture but rather a pattern that emerged when conditions favored it.
The Consequences of Agricultural Surplus
The shift to agriculture had cascading effects on human society. By deliberately cultivating crops and domesticating animals, humans could produce food surpluses—more food than was immediately needed for survival. These surpluses had revolutionary consequences:
Specialization: Not everyone needed to produce food, so some people could become craftspeople, priests, soldiers, or administrators
Denser populations: Agricultural societies could support far more people per unit of land than hunter-gatherer societies
Permanent settlements: The need to tend crops tied people to specific locations, creating the first villages and eventually cities
Wealth accumulation and inequality: Surpluses could be stored and controlled, allowing some individuals to accumulate wealth and power
The Rise of Cities and States
As agricultural societies grew larger and more complex, the first cities emerged—urban centers that became hubs of trade, manufacturing, and political power. These early cities were not merely larger villages; they represented a new form of human organization with centralized authority, specialized institutions, and complex economies.
The relationship between cities and countryside became central to early civilizations. Urban centers served as:
Markets for trade
Manufacturing centers for craft goods
Seats of political and religious authority
Cultural centers for art, writing, and learning
The surrounding countryside supplied the agricultural products that fed the cities and provided raw materials for urban craftspeople.
Alternative Paths: Pastoral Societies
Not all people adopted agriculture. In dry regions unsuitable for farming, pastoral nomadic societies developed, based on herding animals like sheep, goats, cattle, and horses. These societies remained mobile, following their herds to seasonal grazing lands. The relationship between pastoral and agricultural societies was complex, often involving trade but also conflict, as pastoralists sometimes raided settled farming communities.
The Development of Metalworking
The Neolithic period also saw the emergence of metalworking technology:
Copper tools and ornaments first appeared around 6400 BCE, marking the beginning of metallurgy
Gold and silver followed, used for ornaments and status symbols
Bronze (an alloy of copper and tin) emerged around 4500 BCE and became the preferred material for tools and weapons due to its superior hardness and durability
The ability to work with metals represented another major technological advancement that would shape the development of civilizations.
Understanding the Prehistoric Foundations
The prehistoric period, spanning hundreds of thousands of years from human origins to the development of writing, established the fundamental capabilities that would enable civilization. The evolution of bipedalism, tool-making, language, and abstract thought created a species capable of adapting to any environment. The agricultural revolution provided the economic surplus necessary for the complexity of civilization. The great migrations established human populations across the globe. Understanding these long developments provides essential context for all subsequent human history.
Flashcards
Where did modern humans first evolve approximately 300,000 years ago?
Africa
What primary physical ability distinguishes hominins from other primates?
Bipedalism (the ability to walk on two legs)
From which earlier genus did the genus Homo evolve?
Australopithecus
By 400,000 years ago, what technology were hominins using for heat and cooking?
Fire
What was the nomadic lifestyle of Paleolithic humans based on?
Hunting and gathering
What are the primary indicators of early artistic expression and spirituality in Paleolithic humans?
Cave paintings
Ivory, stone, and bone sculptures
Which early human species appeared 2.3 million years ago with a brain 50% larger than Australopithecus?
Homo habilis
Which species was the first hominin to migrate out of Africa and spread across Eurasia?
Homo erectus
What cognitive development dramatically enhanced communication among Homo sapiens?
Syntactic language
When did the single successful "out-of-Africa" migration that accounts for all non-African peoples occur?
70,000–50,000 years ago
By approximately what time had humans reached Australia?
65,000 years ago
Around what date did the Neolithic Revolution begin?
10,000 BCE
What were the two core components introduced by the Neolithic Revolution?
Systematic agriculture
Animal domestication
Where was rice domesticated around 8000–7000 BCE?
The Yangtze River Valley
What type of societies developed in dry regions and often came into conflict with farmers?
Pastoral nomadic societies
Quiz
World history - Human Evolution and Prehistory Quiz Question 1: What does the term bipedalism refer to?
- Walking upright on two legs (correct)
- Swinging from trees using the arms
- Moving on all fours
- Gliding using skin membranes
World history - Human Evolution and Prehistory Quiz Question 2: Approximately how old are the earliest known stone tools?
- About 3.3 million years ago (correct)
- About 2.5 million years ago
- About 1.8 million years ago
- About 500 thousand years ago
World history - Human Evolution and Prehistory Quiz Question 3: The 2020 Science Bulletin article by Li et al. focuses on the dispersal of early modern humans into which region?
- Eastern Eurasia (correct)
- Western Africa
- South America
- Northern Europe
What does the term bipedalism refer to?
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Key Concepts
Human Evolution
Homo sapiens
Out of Africa migration
Bipedalism
Homo erectus
Denisovans
Cultural Developments
Neolithic Revolution
Paleolithic era
Agriculture
Early urbanism
Metalworking
Definitions
Homo sapiens
The species of modern humans that evolved in Africa about 300 000 years ago and became anatomically modern by roughly 125 000 years ago.
Out of Africa migration
The major dispersal of anatomically modern humans from Africa to the rest of the world, occurring primarily between 70 000 and 50 000 years ago.
Neolithic Revolution
The worldwide transition beginning around 10 000 BCE from hunter‑gatherer societies to agriculture, animal domestication, and settled village life.
Bipedalism
The evolutionary development of upright, two‑legged walking that distinguishes hominins from other primates.
Homo erectus
An early human species that appeared about 2 million years ago, was the first hominin to leave Africa and spread across Eurasia.
Denisovans
An extinct archaic human group identified from Siberian fossils that interbred with Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens.
Paleolithic era
The prehistoric period spanning roughly 3.3 million to 12 000 years ago, characterized by stone tool use and nomadic hunter‑gatherer lifestyles.
Early urbanism
The emergence of the first cities and complex societies, such as those documented at sites like Yoffee, during the late fourth to third millennia BCE.
Agriculture
The independent development of systematic crop cultivation and animal husbandry in multiple world regions, beginning around 8500 BCE.
Metalworking
The technological innovation of extracting and shaping metals, starting with copper tools around 6400 BCE and later advancing to bronze production.