HISTORY OF HUMAN PEOPLING
cod. 18907

Academic year 2013/14
1° year of course - Second semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Antropologia (BIO/08)
Field
Attività formative affini o integrative
Type of training activity
Related/supplementary
42 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub:
course unit
in - - -

Learning objectives

The anthropologist is mainly interested in describing the specific characteristics of the human species and its varieties and the ways in which they have established themselves. Disciplines related to Anthropology share as their common denominator the study of the natural history of Man and his various populations, whose origin, differentiation, physical and bio-social evolution they thus consider. These disciplines tend towards a synthesis of knowledge acquired to date regarding the biological history of Man and their fundamental themes include such subjects as the biological and molecular characteristics that differentiate present-day populations and the processes underlying their respective adaptations to environmental conditions, the chronology of the processes underlying human evolution, and the collection, classification and analysis of hominid remains, for the purpose of reconstructing the phylogenesis of the species and understanding the processes and mechanisms that have brought about the biological and cultural evolution of man.
Human Paleonutrition, too, is a discipline that aims to define the type of nutrition of ancient human groups through the study of chemical elements present in bones. It takes into account variations in climate and the environment and the economic choices and subsistence strategies of human groups in the past.

Prerequisites

None

Course unit content

Biological Anthropology in the field of cultural heritage.
Cultural approach to the modes of development of the Anthropological Sciences: the main paradigms which have guided the reading and interpretation of natural phenomena over time.
The historical development of theories of evolution.
Genetic characterisation of the human species.

Evolutionary mechanisms.

Evolution of physical systems. Sociality, communication and language.

Human phylogenesis. Pleistocene hominids and Homo sapiens.
Theories regarding the genesis of Homo sapiens and migrations on a planetary scale: hypotheses and evidence.
The demic diffusion model.
Key moments in human peopling processes (Durand).
Current population of the Earth: the main ethnic groups and their physical characteristics.
The biological study of human remains (with rudiments of Human Anatomy). Ancient DNA. Osteology and skeletal indices. Skeletal biology and paleopathology: traces of disease in bones.
Analysis of biological data in the study of human peopling. DNA analysis: Y chromosome and mtDNA. Biological data: genetic polymorphism and blood groups. Formation of human language and use of linguistic data.
Global diffusion and occupation of multivariate environments. Food requirements in different environments. Biological and cultural adaptation and preconditions. Evolution of pigmentary and tegumentary characteristics. Extreme zones: sub-arctic, desert, high-altitude, malarial areas. Adaptation in temperate, tropical, urban and rural areas.

Full programme

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Bibliography

Mallegni F., Lippi B. [a cura di]. Non omnis moriar, CISU, Rome, 2009.
Canci A., Minozzi S., Archeologia dei resti umani, Carocci ed., Pisa, 2005.
Caramelli D., Lari M., Il DNA antico. Metodi di analisi e applicazioni, Angelo Pontecorboli ed., Florence, 2004.

Teaching methods

Multimedial slides

Assessment methods and criteria

Oral examination

Other information

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