Monday, July 11, 2022
human evolution ,ASU Institute of Human Origins , April 2017.
ASU Institute of Human Origins
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What made us human? In 2014, the ASU Institute of Human Origins received a $4.9 million grant from the John Templeton Foundation to investigate how key traits in human evolution played crucial roles in our emergence. Large brains, long life spans, social cooperation, and complex communication skills are among those behavioral, cognitive, and emotional differences that set us apart.
This public symposium presented the results of research projects that interweave some answers into how we became human. From "bones and stones" to coastal foraging by early modern humans to cooperation in warfare among today's indigenous African communities, IHO scientists presented the findings of three years of research. This symposium took place April 8, 2017 at the Tempe Center for the Arts, Tempe, Arizona.
No part of this video may be used without permission. Copyright Arizona Board of Regents for ASU Institute of Human Origins, April 2017.
14 Comments
rongmaw lin
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marcel70425
marcel70425
3 days ago
A wonderfull presentation, thank you
Academiclibrary
Academiclibrary
4 months ago
What made us human? In 2014, the ASU Institute of Human Origins received a $4.9 million grant from the John Templeton Foundation to investigate how key traits in human evolution played crucial roles in our emergence. Large brains, long life spans, social cooperation, and complex communication skills are among those behavioral, cognitive, and emotional differences that set us apart.
This public symposium presented the results of research projects that interweave some answers into how we became human. From "bones and stones" to coastal foraging by early modern humans to cooperation in warfare among today's indigenous African communities, IHO scientists presented the findings of three years of research. This symposium took place April 8, 2017 at the Tempe Center for the Arts, Tempe, Arizona.
1
Larry Paris
Larry Paris
6 months ago
Oh no, "the John Templeton Foundation". Credibility takes a heavy hit. Why, oh why, Prof. Johanson?
2
brie mills
brie mills
1 month ago
Badly filmed with the audio going in and out and the camera too far from the screen. I was afraid he was going to wear out tthe stage from all that pacing. Had to stop watching. Amateurs.
2
Luís Gonçalves
Luís Gonçalves
2 weeks ago
Can't ear you! 😡
0351nick
0351nick
2 months ago
At asu???
1
Dan Mosley
Dan Mosley
6 months ago
Billy Billy Billy, you are so so wrong in so many accepted ways. Unified theory of Human Evolution is Coming. Spoiler, human line started near 15 Mya.
Mista G
Mista G
5 months ago
The change from 48 pairs of chromosomes, and 46 is not gradual. That is the difference between us and chimps and bonobo, at a fundamental level. Once upon a time, a pair of apes, with 48 pairs, gave birth to a mutant, with only 46 pairs...the first human, why am I wrong?
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