Themes > Science > Zoological Sciences > Animal classification > Primate Taxonomy > Hominids

The family Hominidae includes only one contemporary species, Homo sapiens, which you may recognize as the scientific name for modern humans.  It also includes all the fossil forms of distinctly human ancestors and related species that became clearly differentiated from the other hominoids (the various species of apes) and evolved in a distinctly human direction.  In general, anthropologists apply the term hominid to all human and human like forms the fall within this taxon.

Hominids characteristic be divided into two types:

  1. primitive, or generalized, characteristics, which are held in common with other species within a more comprehensive group (primates, anthropoids, catarrhines, and hominoids); and
  2. derived, or specialized, characteristics, which are distinct to hominid lines and are not shared with non-human primate species.
The derived characteristics are especially important for charting and understanding what we are as humans and how we came to differ from other primates.  One key to understanding the special features of our species is our adaptation to a special habitat, the tropical grasslands of Africa, which represents a departure from the dense forests that support most primate species, including our closest relatives: the gorilla, chimpanzee, and bonobo. A second is the development of technologies and other cultural modes of behaviour that increasingly transformed the environments and contexts in which we survived and developed.

Specialized hominid characteristics

  1. teeth: small front teeth (canines and incisors) and very large molars relative to other primate species;
    (The reduced canine size is associated with the absence of a diastema, a gap between the canine and the premolar, which accomadates a large canine in ape and monkey species.  The large molars may be an adaptation to a diet based on relatively hard vegetable foods such as nuts, berries, and grains that were abundant in the grasslands.)
  2. posture: bipedalism, involving numerous anatomical adaptations including:
    1. a fully erect stance and gait,
    2. shortening of the arms relative to the legs,
    3. restructuring of the pelvic bones for weight bearing,
    4. restructuring of the foot or weight bearing, involving the loss of toe opposability;
  3. hands: increased manual dexterity involving a lengthening of the thumb;
  4. brain: increase in brain size, especially in the frontal lobes;
  5. face: reduction in the musculature and bone mass of the skull and face involving a flattening of the muzzle area.


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