Who's Who In Human Evolution
- By Peter Tyson
- Posted 11.01.08
- NOVA
Despite a fragmentary fossil record, paleoanthropologists have assembled a solid general picture of human evolution. They have traced hominins–that is, species that are bipedal and that are more closely related to humans than to other apes–back more than six million years. In this clickable illustration, follow the trajectory of hominin development from the earliest known species right up to our own kind, Homo sapiens.
Launch Interactive
Printable Version
Meet your increasingly distant cousins in this clickable illustration of the past seven million years.
Note: The illustration, adapted with permission from the Smithsonian Intimate Guide to Human Origins by Carl Zimmer (Smithsonian Books, 2005, p. 41), does not include all hominin species that experts have proposed but rather offers a representative sample. Thanks to Daniel Lieberman, Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard University, for consultation on this feature.
Credits
Credits
- Design
- Tyler Howe
- Programming
- Alan Kwan
Images
- (diagram)
- from Smithsonian Intimate Guide to Human Origins by Carl Zimmer, HarperCollins Publishers, 2005. Used with permission from Madison Press Books.
Editors' Picks
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Becoming Human Part 1
First Steps: Six million years ago, what set our ancestors on the path from ape to human?
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The Adaptable Human
Paleoanthropologist Rick Potts believes modern humans were adapted to change itself, as he explains in this interview.
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The Evolution of Motherhood
Anthropologist Sarah Hrdy talks about how shared infant-rearing made all the difference in early human evolution.
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Our Family Tree
See (and hear) where you stand among the great apes in this audiovisual interactive.
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