- Docente: Stefano Benazzi
- Credits: 6
- SSD: BIO/08
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Ravenna
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Corso:
First cycle degree programme (L) in
Cultural Heritage (cod. 8849)
Also valid for First cycle degree programme (L) in CULTURAL HERITAGE (cod. 0886)
First cycle degree programme (L) in CULTURAL HERITAGE (cod. 0886)
First cycle degree programme (L) in CULTURAL HERITAGE (cod. 0886)
First cycle degree programme (L) in Cultural Heritage (cod. 8849)
Learning outcomes
The course aims to provide basic information about human origin and evolution based on the study of the palaeoanthropological fossil record and the deposits the fossils were retrieved. The student must master the methods of palaeontology, mainly involving the analysis of fossil specimens and the context of their discovery; he/she must also acquire adequate knowledge of the mechanisms and timing of the evolutionary process and the environment in which it took place; finally, he/she must acquire thorough knowledge of the evolution of non-human primates and of man, as reconstructed from the most important fossil specimens and from molecular genetics.
Course contents
The first part of the course deals with the formation of fossils, the principles of evolutionary biology and the methods to study palaeontological specimens. The second part involves an introduction to primate phylogeny and the systematic study of the most important palaeoanthropological remains. The specific course topics are: Contents and methods of human palaeontology. History of evolutionary thinking. Darwin's evolutionary theory and the synthetic theory of evolution. Principles of evolutionary biology. Micro- and macroevolutionary mechanisms and speciation processes. Fossils and evolution. Fossils and fossilization processes. Elements of geological chronology. Methods of dating palaeoanthropological specimens. Methods and criteria of the study of fossils. Elements of anatomy and skeletal morphology. The order Primates. General traits and classification of primates. The human-anthropomorphic ape comparison. Anatomical-functional modifications of the masticatory apparatus, locomotor apparatus and posture, and skull and brain during primate and human evolution. Chronological outline and palaeogeographical context of primate and human evolution. Palaeontology and phylogeny of primates. The environment of hominization. Bipedalism and conquest of the savannah. The human threshold. Stages of biological and cultural evolution from the first hominids to anatomically modern man. The peopling of America and Australia.
Readings/Bibliography
F. MALLEGNI. Mutationes. La lunga traccia dell'evoluzione umana. CISU, Roma, 2010.
F. MALLEGNI (ed), Come eravamo, LTU Guarguaglini, Pisa, 2004.
G. MANZI. L'evoluzione umana. Ed. Il Mulino, Bologna, 2007.Teaching methods
The course is based on lectures dealing with the program topics, supplemented by seminars on specific subjects.
Assessment methods
The evaluation consists of an oral exam on the entire course program. The student must show that he/she has acquired adequate general and systematic knowledge of the various topics and has mastered the scientific and methodological tools necessary for a reasoned analysis and criticism of the program subjects.
Teaching tools
The course is based on lectures dealing with the program topics, supplemented by seminars on specific subjects.
Links to further information
http://www.unibo.it/docenti/stefano.benazzi
Office hours
See the website of Stefano Benazzi