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Title: HUMAN BIOLOGY REVISON NOTES
Description: literally just 47 pages of human bio notes covering everything from: Chemical messengers Hormones secreted from organs other than your pituitary Parts of a neuron and their functions Structural types of neurons and their processes Divisions of the nervous system The CNS in depth How the body detects and regulates internal changes Disruptions to homeostasis Protections against invaders Specific resistances to infection Mutations and gene pools Biotech Evolutionary mechanisms Evidence for evolution (broad) Fossil evidence for evolution (narrow) Evolutionary trends in hominins Human ancestors and Cultural trends in Humans

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Endocrine   Glands   (ductless)   –   Secrete   hormones   into   the   extracellular   fluid   that   surrounds   the   cells   that   make   up   a  
gland  –  secretion  then  passes  into  the  capillaries  to  be  transported  by  the  blood
...
 
Paracrines  or  (local)  hormones  are  secreted  by  cells  in  order  to  communicate  with  other  cells  in  the  same  tissue
...
   
 
PROTEIN  AND  AMINE  HORMONES  (water  soluble)  –  attach  to  receptor  proteins  in  the  membrane  of  the  target  cell  –  
causes   a   secondary   messenger   substance   to   diffuse   through   the   cell   and   activate   particular   enzymes
...
E
...
   
 
STEROID  HORMONES  (lipid  soluble)  –  enter  target  cells  and  bind  to  receptor  proteins  on  the  inside  (this  may  be  on  
the  mitochondria  or  in  the  nucleus)
...
   
 
*  HORMONES  MAY  CHANGE  THE  FUNCTION  OF  A  CELL  BY  CHANGING  THE  TYPE,  QUANTITY  OR  ACTIVITY  OF  THE  
PROTEINS   PRODUCED   –   THEY   ARE   NOT   ENZYMES   BUT   CAN   EXERT   INFLUENCE   BY   CHANGING   THE   ENZYME   ITSELF  
OR  THE  CONCENTRATION  OF  THE  ENZYME  *  
 
HORMONES  MAY:    
Activate  certain  genes  in  the  nucleus  so  that  a  particular  enzyme  or  structural  protein  is  produced
...
 
Change   the   rate   of   production   of   an   enzyme   or   structural   protein   by   changing   the   rate   of   transcription/translation  
during  protein  production
...
 
Bind  to  a  receptor  within  a  cell  and  block  the  endogenous  hormone  from  binding
...
 
Examples  
of  

3
...
 
3
...
   
 

 
 

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1
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HYPOTHALAMUS  AND  PITUITARY:    
The   hypothalamus   is   located   at   the   base   of   the   brain   –   regulates   many   of   the   basic   functions   of   the   body   such   as   C
...
T,  
water   balance   and   heart   rate   –   many   of   these   functions   are   carried   out   through   the   pituitary   gland   (hypophysis   –  
approx
...
  The  
pituitary  gland  is  separated  into  2  sections  –  posterior  and  anterior:    
 
POSTERIOR   PITUITARY   (neurohypophysis)   –   not   a   true   gland   because   it   does   NOT   secret   hormones   –   connected   to  
the  hypothalamus  by  nerve  fibres  that  travel  through  the  infundibulum
...
   
Oxytocin   =   stimulates   contraction   of   uterine   and   mammary   muscles,   is   the   ‘happy   hormone’/evokes   feelings   of  
contentment   and   joy   and   is   believed   to   have   a   role   in   the   healing   of   external   wounds   by   regulating   inflammation   of  
tissues  (decreases  certain  cytokines)
...
   
 
ADH  production  can  be  inhibited  by  the  consumption  of  alcohol
...
g
...
  BUT   WAIT!   You   have   a   bottle   of   whiskey   with   you   (60%  
water)  –  do  you  drink  the  whiskey  or  not?  Why?  
~  YOU  DON’T  DRINK  THE  WHISKEY!  
Whiskey  acts  as  a  diuretic  –  inhibits  the  secretion  of  ADH  from  the  posterior  lobe  which  means  that  when  you’re  super  
dehydrated   and   the   body   needs   to   conserve   all   the   water   it   has,   ADH   isn’t   able   to   do   its   job   and   stimulate   the  
reabsorption   of   excess   water   from   your   urine   AND   as   alcohol   is   a   diuretic   (from   Greek   word   diouretikos   –   to   urinate),  
you   basically   just   pee   out   all   the   water   your   body   needs   (hence   term   ‘going   out   on   the   piss’   when   getting   drunk)
...
 Alcohol  is  also  an  irritant  to  the  stomach  –  especially  when  the  volume  of  water  in  
the  body  is  depleted  –  causes  the  drinker  to  vomit  –  2  things  can  come  of  this:    
Dehydration  –  many  side  effects  =  drowsiness,  confusion,  decreased  CBT  –  hypothermia,  fainting  and  death
...
   
 
ANTERIOR   PITUITARY   (adenohypophysis)   –   has   no   nerves   connecting   it   to   the   hypothalamus   –   it   is   connected   by   a  
complex  set  of  blood  vessels
...
   
 
THYROID  GLAND  
Located  in  the  neck,  just  below  the  larynx  and  consists  of  two  lobes  that  sit  on  either  side  of  the  trachea
...
   
Thyroxine   is   involved   in   body   metabolism   and   regulates   reactions   in   which   complex   molecules   are   broken   down   to  
release  energy
...
B
...
 
~  A  person  who  is  physically  deformed  and  has  learning  difficulties  due  to  a  congenital  thyroid  deficiency
...
 Cretinism  is  therefore  
most  probably  due  to  a  diet  deficient  in  iodine
...
 If  
untreated,  it  results  in  mild  to  severe  impairment  of  both  physical  and  mental  growth  and  development
...
 Adult  stature  without  treatment  ranges  from  1  to  1
...
3  
to   5
...
  In   adults,   Cretinism   results   in   mental   deterioration,   swelling   of   the   skin,   loss   of   water   and   hair
...
 Ovulation  is   impeded,   and   infertility  is   common
...
 Cognitive  impairment  may  also  range  from  mild  to  so  severe  that  the  person  is  nonverbal  and  dependent  on  
others  for  basic  care
...
 Other  signs  may  include  thickened  skin,  enlarged  tongue,  or  a  
protruding  abdomen
...
  This   type   of   cretinism   has   been   almost   completely   eliminated   in   developed   countries   by   early  
diagnosis   by  newborn   screening  schemes   followed   by   lifelong   treatment   with  thyroxine
...
  In   the   case   of   dosing   infants,   the   T4   tablets   are   generally   crushed   and   mixed   with   breast   milk,  
formula  milk  or  water
...
  Iodized   salt   is  
usually   the   preferred   prophylactic   vehicle,   but   iodized   vegetable   oil,   iodized   water,   and   iodine   tablets   are   also  
occasionally  used
...
  Your   doctor   might   need   you   to   fast,   take   medication,   or   eat   particular   foods   for   a   brief   period  
prior  to  your  blood  test
...
  Doctors   may   also   try  
screening/imaging  tests  to  locate  or  pinpoint  a  nodule/tumour
...
)   to   the  
central  nervous  system  (brain  and  spinal  cord)    
-­‐  Motor/effector  –  carry  messages  from  the  CNS  to  the  muscles  and  glands  (the  effectors)    

-­‐   Interneurons/association/connector/relay   –   located   in   the   CNS   and   are   the   link   between   sensory   and   motor  
neurons  
 
PARTS  OF  A  NEURON  

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 
 
PART  OF  THE  NEURON  
Soma  

Nucleus  

Axon    
Myelin  sheath  

Node  of  Ranvier  

WHAT  IS  IT  MADE  OF  
Nissl  granules  –  
composed  mainly  of  
rough  ER  and  free  
polyribosomes  
Genetic  material  in  the  
form  of  chromosomes  
and  the  nucleolus,  which  
is  made  up  of  RNA  and  
protein
...
   
Archivist  and  architect  –  
it  contains  the  DNA,  
which  keeps  the  cell  
history  and  synthesizes  
RNA  from  DNA  and  ships  
it  to  the  cytoplasm  for  
protein  synthesis
...
   
Electrical  insulation  –  
protect  the  axon  from  
electrically  charged  ions  
found  in  the  fluid  
surrounding  the  entire  
nervous  system  and  
increase  speed  at  which  
impulses  propagate  
along  the  myelinated  
fibres
...
     
Receives  electrical  
impulses  from  other  cells  

Synaptic  contact  with  
other  nerve  
cells/effectors  and  to  
communicate  
neurotransmitters  

 
 

1
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3
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Bipolar  neurons  –  Have  one  axon  and  one  dendrite  that  may  have  many  branches  on  either  end  –  may  be  found  in  eye,  
ear  and/or  nose  –  they  take  messages  from  receptor  cells  to  other  neurons
...
 The  soma  is  to  one  side  of  the  axon  –  most  sensory  neurons  that  
carry  messages  to  the  spinal  cord  are  of  this  type
...
 When  an  action  potential  is  stimulated,  
sodium  ion  channels  and  sodium  from  the  inside  floods  the  outside  and  the  neuron  depolarizes  as  the  impulse  travels  
down  the  axon
...
 The  refractory  period  is  during  the  time  just  before  hyperpolarization  to  the  neurons  
return  to  resting  potential  -­‐  It  is  at  this  point,  that  no  other  action  potentials  can  pass  through  the  axon    
 

 

DEPOLARIZATION  ONLY  OCCURS  IF  AN  IMPULSE  CAN  STIMULATE  A  CHANGE  OF  AT  LEAST  15mV  –  this  is  an  all-­‐or-­‐
nothing  response
...

Slow  depolarization  of  the  membrane  brings  
the  potential  to  the  threshold
...

Sodium  channels  in  the  membrane  open;  
sodium  floods  into  the  membrane  and  the  
membrane  becomes  depolarized/membrane  
voltage  increases
...

Sodium  channels  close  and  membrane  
repolarizes
...

Membrane  returns  to  resting  state
...
  Once   this   impulse   has   been   sent,   an   enzyme   called   acetylcholinesterase  
attaches  to  the  acetylcholine  and  breaks  it  down  in  order  to  allow  the  muscle/organ  to  relax
...
g
...
 This  causes  a  build  up  of  the  acetylcholine  within  the  synaptic  cleft,  which  
continues  to  act,  so  that  any  nerve  impulses  are  continually  transmitted  and  muscle  contractions  do  not  stop
...
 TTX  binding  physically  
blocks  the  flow  of  sodium  ions  through  the  channel,  thereby  preventing  action  potential  
(AP)  generation  and  propagation
...
   
 
CHAPTER  4  -­‐  DIVISIONS  OF  THE  NERVOUS  SYSTEM  

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 
 

CENTRAL  NERVOUS  SYSTEM  
(brain  and  spinal  cord)  

PERIPHERAL  NERVOUS  SYSTEM  
(12  pairs  of  cranial  nerves  and  31  
pairs  of  spinal  nerves)    

 
 

 

 
 
AFFERENT  DIVISIONS  –    
Carries  shit  TO  the  CNS  
 
 
 

Somatic  division  –  
carries  messages  
to  the  skeletal  
muscles  

EFFERENT  DIVISION  –    
Carries  shit  AWAY  from  
the  CNS  

Sympathetic  NS  

Somatosens
ory  neurons  
from  skin  
and  muscle  

Visceral  sensory  
neurons  from  
internal  organs  
 

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o
o

 
 
 
 
 

Parasympathetic  
NS  

 
 
 
 

Autonomic  division  –  carries  
           messages    t        the                                                                                
                                       o              
heart/involuntary  muscles  and  
glands  

THE  AUTONOMIC  NERVOUS  SYSTEM  
~  It  is  studied  as  a  separate  system  to  the  PNS  but  it  is  actually  structurally  and  functionally  part  of  the  same  system  ~  
 
Controls:  Heart  rate,  blood  pressure,  body  temperature,  digestion,  release  of  energy,  pupil  diameter,  airflow  to  the  
lungs  and  excretion
...
 
 
CORPUS  CALLOSUM    
A  large  bundle  of  nerve  fibres  that  connects  the  two  hemispheres  –  it  cannot  be  seen  outside  the  brain
...
  Surface   is   folded   into   convolutions   (gyri   –   above   and   sulci   –   below   =   used   to  
further  divide  the  4  lobes  of  the  brain)
...
 It  contains  the:  
Cardiac  centre  –  regulates  rate  and  force  of  heartbeat  
Respiratory  centre  –  control  rate  and  depth  of  breathing  
Vasomotor  centre  –  Regulates  diameter  of  blood  vessels  
 
 
 
 
CEREBELLUM  
Underneath  the  rear  part  of  the  brain  –  less  prominent  folds  than  those  of   the  cerebrum  –  exerts  control  over  posture,  
balance  and  fine  control  over  voluntary  muscle  movement
...
   
Functions  of  the  hypothalamus  include  regulation  of:  
The  ANS  –  regulation  of  heart  rate,  blood  pressure,  secretion  of  digestive  juices,  pupil  of  the  eye  and  movements  of  the  
alimentary  canal
...
   
 
FUNCTIONS  OF  THE  CEREBRUM  
Thinking  
Reasoning  
Learning    
Memory  
Intelligence    
Sense  of  responsibility  
 
Three  types  of  functional  areas  in  the  cerebral  cortex:  
Sensory  areas    –  receive  and  process  nerve  impulses  from  the  senses  
Motor  areas  –  send  impulses  to  muscles,  especially  for  voluntary  movement  
Association  areas  –  interpret  information  from  the  senses  and  make  it  useful    
 

PRIMARY  MOTOR  CORTEX  –  Frontal  lobe  (reasoning,  planning,  higher  order  though  processes,  emotions,  movement  
and  balance)  
PRIMARY  SENSORY  CORTEX  –  Parietal  lobe  (touch,  pressure,  temperature  and  pain)  
PRIMARY  VISUAL  CORTEX  –  Occipital  lobe  (visual-­‐spatial  processing,  colours  and  movement  discrimination)  
PRIMARY  AUDITORY  CORTEX  –  Temporal  lobe  (perception,  recognition  and  processing  of  auditory  stimuli  –  key  in  the  
comprehension  of  speech)  
 
 
 

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CHAPTER  6  –  DETECTING  AND  REGULATING  CHANGE  
 
 
Receptors:  
 
A  receptor  is  a  structure  that  is  able  to  detect  the  changes  in  the  internal  and  external  environment  of  the  human  body
...
e
...
   
Other  receptors  a  simply  nerve  endings    -­‐  possibly  spread  throughout  the  parts  of  the  body/  whole  body  as  is  the  case  
of  pain  and  temperature  receptors  in  the  skin
...
  This   information   is   received   by   the   hypothalamus/cerebrum   so   that   we   are   constantly  
consciously  aware  of  our  surrounding  temperature
...
   
Temperature   inside   the   body   (core   temperature)   is   monitored   and   regulated   by   the   hypothalamus   –   the  
thermoreceptors  within  the  hypothalamus  are  able  to  detect  changes  in  the  temperature  of  the  blood  flowing  around  
our  brain  –  using  its  own  thermoreceptors  as  well  as  the  receptors  in  our  skin,  the  hypothalamus  is  able  to  regulate  
body  temperature  (maintaining  homeostatic  temperature  of  37  degrees)
...
   
Central   thermoreceptors   –   hypothalamus   –   the   main   temperature   regulating   centre   –   detect   changes   in   CBT   and  
process  and  respond  to  external  changes
...
   
 

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2
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4
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Chemoreceptors:    
 
Stimulated   by   particular   chemicals   –   found   within   the   nose   (sensitivity   to   smell)   and   on   the   tongue   (sensitivity   to  
tastes)  –  also  found  within  the  body  (sensitive  to  the  composition  and  concentration  of  body  fluids)
...
   
 
Touch  receptors:    
 
Found  mainly  in  the  skin  –  when  they  are  closer  to  the  surface  of  the  skin  then  they  are  more  sensitive  to  very  light  
touches  i
...
 in  the  lips,  finger  tips,  eyelids,  external  genitals  and  hair  follicles  (these  respond  to  very  small  movements  
that   bend   the   hair)
...
  They  
are   especially   concentrated   in   the   skin   and   mucous   membranes   –   can   be   found   in   nearly   every   organ   in   the   body  
except  the  brain  –  pain  receptors  adapt  very  little  (if  at  all)  so  pain  remains  present  until  the  stimulation  stops  with  
prolonged  exposure  to  stimulus  making  the  pain  worse
...
 Reflexes  have  4  important,  
distinctive  properties:    
A  stimulus  is  required  to  trigger  a  reflex  –  it  is  not  spontaneous  
A  reflex  is  involuntary  –  no  conscious  thought  involved  
A  reflex  is  rapid  –  only  a  small  amount  of  neurons  involved  
It  is  stereotyped  –  occurs  in  the  same  way  each  time  
 
BASIC  COMPONENTS  OF  A  REFLEX  ARC:    
A  receptor  is  either  the  ending  of  a  sensory  neuron  or  a  specialized  cell  associated  with  the  end  of  a  sensory  neuron
...
   
A  motor  neuron  carries  the  impulse  to  an  effector
...
   
Sensory  neuron  conducts  the  impulse  from  the  receptor  to  the  spinal  cord
...
 One  or  more  interneurons  pass  the  message  to  the  appropriate  motor  neuron
...
   
RESPONSE:  The  effector  (in  the  case  of  sticking  hand  on  a  thumb  prick  –  the  biceps  muscle)  contracts  removing  hand  
from  painful  stimulus
...
   
Important  aspects  of  the  internal  environment  that  need  to  me  maintained:    
CBT  
PH  and  concentrations  of  dissolved  substances  in  the  blood  
Concentrations  of  glucose  in  the  blood  
Concentrations  of  O2  and  CO2  in  the  blood  and  other  body  fluids  
Blood  pressure  
Concentration  of  metabolic  wastes  
 

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NEGATIVE  FEEDBACK  LOOPS:  
Stimulus  –  change  in  environment  that  prompts  a  response  
Receptor  –  detects  the  change  
Modulator  –  control  centre  responsible  for  processing  information  from  receptor  and  sending  out  information  to  the  
effector
...
   
 
CHAPTER  7  –  THERMOREGULATION  
“Maintaining  the  balance  between  heat  production  and  heat  loss/expenditure”  –  HEAT  GAIN  MUST  =  HEAT  LOSS  
 
Heat  input:  
Body  processes  (metabolism)  especially  respiration  of  muscle  and  liver  cells
...
 
 
Heat  output:  
Radiation,  conduction  and  convection  to  surroundings
...
   
 
WHAT  FACTORS  INCREASE  HEAT  PRODUCTION:    
Metabolism  of  lipids,  proteins  and  carbohydrates  releases  energy  –  some  used  by  the  muscles  and  cells  for  respiration  
–  most  is  lost  as  heat  waste
...
   
Stress  (activation  of  the  sympathetic  nervous  system  and  release  of  norepinephrine)    
CBT  increase  –  for  every  degree  increase,  metabolic  rate  increases  by  about  10%  
 
PREVENTING  BODY  TEMP  FROM  FALLING:  
Vasoconstriction    
Stimulation  of  the  adrenal  medulla  to  secrete  adrenaline  and  release  noradrenaline  –  increases  metabolic  rate  
Shivering  –  oscillating  muscle  tremors  –  10  to  20  per  second  
Stimulation   of   the   anterior   pituitary   lobe   to   secrete   TSH   –   causes   the   thyroid   gland   to   release   thyroxine   into   the   blood  
–  slower  to  act  but  longer  lasting  
Behavioural  response  –  putting  more  clothes,  reducing  body  surface  area  by  curling  into  a  ball  or  turning  the  heater  on  
 
PREVENTING  BODY  TEMP  FROM  RISING  








Vasodilation    
Sweating   (only   applicable   in   places   that   are   hot   and   ARID   (not   humid)   –   sweat   has   to   be   able   to   evaporate   for   their   to  
be  a  cooling  effect  
Decreased  metabolic  rate  –  reduction  in  the  secretion  of  thyroxine  (long  term  response)    
Increasing  body  surface  area  –  spreading  out  
Decreasing  voluntary  activity  –  the  less  you  move,  the  less  hot  you  become    
Behavioural  response  –  removing  clothing,  turning  on  fan/AC  
 
TEMPERATURE  TOLERANCE:  
 
42c  –  dangerous  level  
45c  –  death  usually  occurs  
33c  –  hypothermic  level  
32c  <  -­‐  death  usually  occurs  but  people  can  survive  at  lower  temperatures  
 
HEAT   STROKE   -­‐   body   temperature   rises   and   regulatory   mechanisms   cease   –   VERY   SERIOUS   –   treatments   include  
immersing  person  in  cold  water  to  rapidly  decrease  CBT
...
5L  per/day)    
Food  (700mL)  
Metabolic  water  –  by  product  of  metabolism  of  cells  (200mL)  
Drink  (1600mL)  
Water  loss  (2
...

2
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4
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2
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4
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6
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8
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2
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4
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6
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2
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4
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6
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 (Faeces  from  undigested  food  is  not  considered  to  be  a  part  of  excretion  because  it  was  not  
produced  by  the  cells)  
Kidneys   –   THE   MAIN   EXCRETORY   ORGAN   –   involved   in   maintaining   a   constant   concentration   of   materials   in   the   body  
fluid   –   most   important   substance   excreted   by   the   nephrons   is   urea   which   is   produced   in   the   liver   during   the  
breakdown  of  proteins  
 
THE  KIDNEYS:    
Renal  vein  –  takes  blood  away  from  the  kidney  
Renal  artery  –  takes  blood  to  the  kidney  
Ureter  –  a  tube  that  drains  urine  away  from  the  kidney  
Bladder  –  a  muscular  bag  that  holds  urine  until  it  is  passed  from  the  body    
Urethra  –  a  tube  from  the  bladder  that  opens  to  the  outside  
 
PROCESS  OF  THE  NEPHRON:    
Blood  enters  the  glomerulus  under  high  pressure  
FILTRATION   –   The   high   blood   pressure   forces   water   and   small   dissolved   molecules   out   of   the   blood   and   into   the  
glomerular  capsule  –  large  molecules  are  retained  in  the  blood  and  pumped  back  into  the  body  systems  
REABSORPTION   –   The   filtrate   passes   into   the   proximal   convoluted   tubule   where   water,   ions   and   all   organic  
substances  are  reabsorbed  into  the  bloodstream
...
   
URINE  –  The  water  and  dissolved  substances  that  remain  make  up  urine  –  which  is  carried  by  the  collecting  ducts  to  
the  bladder
...
   
 
Water  concentration  of  blood  plasma  decreases;  osmotic  pressure  is  increased  
Osmoreceptors  in  the  hypothalamus  are  stimulated  
Posterior  pituitary  is  stimulated  to  release  ADH  
Permeability  to  water  in  the  DCT  and  collecting  ducts  are  increased  
Increased  amount  of  water  is  reabsorbed  into  blood  plasma  
Water  concentration  of  blood  plasma  is  increased;  osmotic  pressure  is  decreased  
 
IN   ADDITION   TO   ADH,   ALDOSTERONE   IS   SECRETED   BY   THE   ADRENAL   CORTEX  –   IT   ACTS   ON   THE   NEPHRONS   TO  
INCREASE  THE  AMOUNT  OF  SODIUM  (AND  WATER)  REABSORBED  AND  THE  AMOUNT  OF  POTASSIUM  EXCRETED  IN  
URINE   –   INCREASING   WATER   ABSORPTION   ALSO   INCREASES   BLOOD   VOLUME   WHICH   INCREASES   BLOOD  
PRESSURE  THUS  ALDOSTERONE  INDIRECTLY  AFFECTS  BLOOD  PRESSURE
...
   
 
CELLULAR  RESPIRATION  EQUATION  
 
Glucose  +  oxygen  =  carbon  dioxide  +  water  +  energy  
C6H12O6  +  O2  =  CO2  +  H2O  +  energy  
 
Glycogen  –  the  form  in  which  carbohydrates  are  stored  in  the  body  (mainly  in  the  liver  (100g)  and  muscle  cells  (the  
rest  up  to  400g))    
Glucagon  –  hormone  secreted  by  the  pancreas  to  break  down  glycogen  to  glucose  to  increase  blood  sugar  levels  
Insulin  –  secreted  by  pancreas  to  build  glucose  back  up  to  glycogen  and  reduce  blood  sugar  levels
...
   
 
ADRENAL  MEDULLA  –    
Synthesizes  epinephrine  and  norepinephrine  
Stimulate  the  breakdown  of  glycogen  in  liver  and  release  of  glucose  into  blood  
Stimulates   the   production   of   lactic   acid   from   glycogen   in   muscle   cells   –   which   can   then   be   used   by   the   liver   to  
manufacture  glucose  
 
EFFECTS  OF  CAFFEINE  ON  THE  BODY:    
Increased   alertness   –   high   concentrations   of   caffeine   mobilize   the   calcium   in   cells   and   inhibit   specific   enzymes,  
increasing  energy  metabolism  throughout  the  brain  while  decreasing  cerebral  blood  flow
...
   
Caffeine   antagonizes   the   adenosine   receptors   in   the   brain   which   control   the   activity   of   neurotransmitters   such   as  
dopamine   and   serotonin   –   by   blocking   the   action   of   adenosine,   caffeine   constricts   the   cerebral   blood   vessels   and  
increases  the  release  of  excitory  hormones
...
   
These  nerves  have  their  origins  in  the  spinal  cord  –  if  these  nerves  are  injured  or  the  area  from   which  these  nerves  
originate  then  the  result  is  complete  paralysis  of  the  of  the  muscles  that  move  air  in  and  out  of  the  lungs
...
   
 
OXYGEN  CONCENTRATION:  
If   concentration   of   oxygen   in   blood   plasma   decreases   while   everything   else   remains   constant   then   breathing   rate  
increases  (this   is   only   a   very   slight   increase   –   oxygen   concentration   has   to   fall   dramatically   for   their   to   be   a   noticeable  
change  in  breathing  rate
...
   
 
CARBON  DIOXIDE  CONCENTRATION:    
Concentration  of  CO2  in  the  blood  plasma  has  a  major  effect  in  the  regulation  of  breathing  –  a  relatively  small  increase  
in  CO2  levels  creates  a  significant  change  in  breathing  rate  (increase)    
 
An  increase  in  CO2  levels  also  increases  levels  of  hydrogen  ions  –  this  increase  is  detected  by  chemoreceptors  (inside  
the   medulla)   which   in   turn   transmit   nerve   impulses   to   the   respiratory   centre,   stimulating   an   increase   in   breathing  
rate
...
   
The  immediate  increase  in  breathing  rate  is  produced  by  stimulation  of  the  aortic  and  carotid  bodies  from  the  increase  
in  hydrogen  ions
...
   
 
 
VOLUNTARY  CONTROL  OF  BREATHING:    
By   passes   the   respiratory   centre   of   the   medulla   oblongata   –   protective   device   preventing   irritating   gases   and   water  
into   the   lungs   –   only   viable   for   a   limited   time   as   the   eventual   build   up   of   carbon   dioxide   in   the   lungs   stimulates   an  
autonomic  reflex  kick-­‐starting  the  respiratory  centre  to  send  impulses  to  the  inspiratory  muscles  –  forcing  us  to  take  a  
breath
...
 
 
Cardiac  output  (mL/min)  =  heart  rate  (b/pm)  x  stroke  volume  (mL)    
As  cardiac  output  increases  so  does  blood  pressure  
Vasodilation  =  decrease  BP  /  vasoconstriction  =  increase  BP  
 
CHAPTER  9  –  DISRUPTIONS  TO  HOMEOSTASIS  
 
HORMONAL  CAUSES  OF  DISRUPTIONS:    
Diabetes:  
 
DIABETES  MELLITUS  (TYPE  1  –  INSULIN  DEPENDANT)  VS  DIABETES  TYPE  2  (METABOLIC  DISORDER)    
 
TYPE   1   DIABETES   –   (usually   begins   in   between   adolescence   and   early   adulthood   /   10-­‐25)   -­‐   results   from   the  
autoimmune  destruction  of  the  insulin  producing  beta  cells  of  the  pancreas
...
  In   people   with   type   1   diabetes,  
they  have  absent  or  malfunctioning  beta  cells  so  the  hormones  insulin  and  amylin  (released  with  insulin  to  decrease  
glucagon   levels)   are   missing   which   means   the   hormone   GLP-­‐1   (glucagon-­‐like   peptide   1)   cant   work   properly
...
   
Organs  involved:  
Pancreas  
Liver  
Kidneys  
Treatments:    
Low  carbohydrate  diet  
Insulin  injections/pump  –  4  types  of  insulin;  rapid/short/intermediate/long  acting  
Pancreas  transplant  
Islet  cell  transplant    
TYPE   2   DIABETES   –   (usually   occurs   in   the   middle   aged   /   45+)   -­‐   a   metabolic   disorder   characterized   by   high   blood  
sugar,   insulin   resistance   and   a   relative   lack   of   insulin
...
  It   has   also   been   linked   to   a  
lack  of  sleep  –  decreases  metabolism
...
   
Treatments:  

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Exercising  –  high  resistance  and  aerobic  exercise  are  generally  the  most  successful  
Diabetic  diet  that  promotes  weight  loss
...
e
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O
...
D)  
SIGNS  AND  SYMPTOMS:  
Chronic  cough  
Sputum  production  
Shortness  of  breath  
Barrel  chest  
High  pressure  on  lung  arteries  –  strains  R
...
 
 
PATHOGENS:  
Disease  causing  organisms  –  most  commonly  viruses/bacteria  –  sometimes  fungi  or  parasites
...
   
 
WHATS  ON/IN  BACTERIA?    

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Slime  layer  –  around  the  outside  of  some  bacteria    
Cell  wall  –  often  made  of  peptidoglycan  –  a  combined  carb/protein
...
 
New  viral  genes  are  produced  by  the  host  cell  and  so  hundreds  of  new  virus  particles  are  formed
...
   
 
TRANSMISSION  BY  PATHOGENS:    
By  contact  –  direct  (touching  infected)  /  indirect  (touching  something  the  infected  touched)  
By  body  fluids  –  STI’s,  Hep  B/C  and  HIV  from  shared  needles  
By  droplets    -­‐  sneezing/coughing  around  non-­‐infected  
By  ingestion  –  contaminated  food/drink  –  salmonella  and  typhoid  fever  
By  air  –  moisture  in  exhaled  droplets  
By  vectors  –  on  animals  such  as  household  flies,  fleas  and  mosquitoes  
 
NON  SPECIFIC  DEFENSES  
Work  against  all  pathogens    -­‐  first  line  of  defense  
EXTERNAL:    
Skin  –  sweat,  sebum  and  low  pH  
Mucous  membranes  
Hair  –  nose,  eyelids  and  ears  (trap  90%  of  foreign  bodies)  
Acids    

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MACROPHAGES   ARE   LARGE   PHAGOCYTES   THAT   DEVELOP   FROM   SOME   LEUCOYCTES   –   SOME   WANDER,   LOOKING  
FOR  PATHOGENS  WHILE  OTHERS  ARE  FIXED  IN  PLACE  AND  DEAL  WITH  PATHOGENS  THAT  COME  TO  THEM
...
 
ANTIBODIES:  
A   blood   protein   produced   in   response   to   and   counteracting   a   specific   antigen
...
 
Y  in  shape  
Disulphide  bond  connecting  the  constant  and  variable  portions  
Lower  ¾  is  the  heavy  chain  

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B  CELLS    
Humoral  and  antibody  mediated  immunity  
Educated  in  bone  marrow  
Chemical  based  system  
Produce  antibodies  (Ig  –  immunoglobulin)  
Effective  against  extracellular  bacteria  and  some  viruses  
T  CELLS  
Cellular  and  cell  mediated  immunity  
Educated  in  thymus    
Cell  based  system  
Produce  killer,  memory  and  helper  cells  
Effective  against  intracellular  viruses,  cancer  and  some  bacteria  
 
KILLER  T  (CYTOTOXIC)  CELLS  –  destroy  body  cells  infected  by  viruses  or  transformed  by  cancer  
HELPER  T  CELLS  –  perform  many  immune  functions  –  they  are  essential  for  activating  killer  cells  and  B  cells  
MEMORY  CELLS  -­‐    remain  in  the  body  and  enable  the  immune  system  to  react  rapidly  should  it  encounter  the  same  
antigens  again  
CYTOKINES  –  stimulate  T  cells  to  divide  and  differentiate  into  killer,  helper  or  memory  cells  
ANTIBIOTICS  –  chemicals  specifically  designed  to  kill  a  certain  bacteria  –  produces  by  fungi  or  other  microorganisms  
(penicillin)  
AGGLUTINATION   -­‐   a   reaction   in   which   particles   (as   red   blood   cells   or   bacteria)   suspended   in   a   liquid   collect   into  
clumps  and  which  occurs  especially  as  a  serological  response  to  a  specific  antibody
...
 Internal  cell  infection  is  displayed  on  the  cell  surface  by  MHC  class  one  
2
...
 Costimulation  occurs  with  helper  T  cells  and  CD8  
4
...
 Some  T  cells  differentiate  into  cytotoxic  T  cells  
6
...
 Cytokines  kill  the  cell  
8
...
  Memory   T   cells   remember   the   antigen   and   produce   faster   immune   response   during  
subsequent  exposures  
 
ACTIVE  IMMUNITY:    
(antigen  activated)  
immune  system  activated  
memory  cells  produced  =  immunity  acquired  

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protection  slow  to  develop  but  permanent  
NATURAL  –  involves  B  and  T  cells  (natural  contact  w/disease)  
ARTIFICIAL  –  vaccines  (dead,  attenuated,  sub  unit,  toxoid)  
 
PASSIVE  IMMUNITY  
(antibody  activated)    
immune  system  not  activated  
no  memory  cells  formed  =  not  immunity  acquired  
protection  immediate  but  only  temporary  
NATURAL  –  IgG  (cross  placenta)  /  IgA  (cross  breast  milk)  
ARTIFICIAL  –  serum  (dose  of  antibody  to  fight  infection)  
 
CHAPTER  12  –  MUTATIONS  AND  GENE  POOLS:  
 
Species  –  a  group  of  individuals  who  share  many  of  the  same  characteristics  and  are  able  to  interbreed  naturally  to  
create  fertile  offspring
...
   
 
GENE  POOLS:    
Population   –   a   group   of   organisms   of   the   same   species   living   together   in   a   particular   place   at   a   particular   time   –  
geneticists  (scientists  specializing  in  inheritance)  prefer  to  look  at  a  population  as  a  whole  and  not  the  individuals  who  
make  up  that  population
...
   
-­‐   I
...
  –   Cystic   fibrosis   is   a   mutation   of   chromosome   7   –   if   the   allele   frequency   of   CF   is   5%,   then   among   the   members   of  
the  population,  5  in  every  100  people  will  have  cystic  fibrosis
...
e
...
   
 
MUTATIONS:    
Offspring  may  show  variations  that  do  not  resemble  either  parent  and  have  never  occurred  before  in  the  history  of  the  
family  –  they  may  occur  quite  suddenly  of  by  pure  chance  –  these  are  called  MUTATIONS
...
   
 
There  are  2  main  types  of  mutations:    
Gene   mutations   –   changes   in   a   single   gene   so   that   traits   normally   produced   by   that   gene   are   changed   or   destroyed
...
 
When   it   was   recognized   that   genetic   information   is  carried  in  the  sequence  of  bases  in  the  DNA,  it  became  possible  to  
understand  the  chemical  nature  of  gene  mutations
...
   
1
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2
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DMD   becomes   apparent   at   3-­‐5   years   old   and   results   in   the   wasting   of   muscles   in   the   legs,   arms,  
shoulders  and  chest
...
 

3
...
  Without   the   correct   protein   the   affected   person   suffers   from   symptoms:   salty  
tasting   skin,   persistent   coughing,   wheezing   or   pneumonia   and   digestive   problems
...
   
Chromosomal   mutations   –   where   all   or   parts   of   a   chromosome   are   affected   –   therefore   affect   not   just   one   but   a  
number  of  genes
...
Deletion  –  part  of  a  chromosome  is  lost  
2
...
Inversion   –   breaks   occur   in   a   chromosome   and   the   broken   piece   joins   back   in   but   the   wrong  
way   around   –   this   changes   the   order   of   the   genes   on   the   chromosome   and   may   disrupt   the  
pairing  of  homologous  chromosomes  during  meiosis  
4
...
Non-­‐disjunction   –   during   meiosis,   a   pair   of   chromosomes   does   not   separate   and   so   one  
daughter   cell   has   an   extra   chromosome   and   one   daughter   has   one   less   chromosome   –  
sometimes  referred  to  as  ANEUPLOIDY  –  a  change  in  chromosome  number  
Chromosomal   mutations   cause   abnormalities   so   severe   that   miscarriage   often   occurs   during   early   pregnancy
...
 Patau  syndrome  is  trisomy  on  the  13th  chromosome  and  produces  individuals  with  mental  
retardation,   a   cleft   lip/palate,   malformations   of   the   ears   and   eyes   and   an   extra   finger   on   each   hand   –   it   occurs   in  
1/5000   live   births   though   more   than   80%   of   affected   people   die   within   a   month   of   birth
...
  Trisomy   can   also   occur   in   the   sex   chromosomes    -­‐   non   disjunction  
may   occur   during   the   1st/2nd   meiotic   division   resulting   in   individuals   with   one   extra   x   (XXY)   or   one   extra   y   (XYY)  
chromosome  –  trisomy  XXY  sufferers  are  normal  boys  but  develop  Klinefelters  syndrome  as  adults  –  the  have  small  
testes  that  do  not  produce  sperm,  enlarged  breasts  and  sparse  body  hair  –  occasionally  they  may  be  mentally  retarded
...
 If  the  
entire  autosome  is  missing,  this  generally  produces  severe  malformations  that  end  in  spontaneous  miscarriage;  if  only  
part  of  the  chromosome  is  missing,  this  is  referred  to  as  partial  monosomy  –  part  of  the  chromosome  has  two  copies  
but  part  only  has  one  –  i
...
 Cri  du  Chat  (cry  of  the  cat)  syndrome  –  missing  portion  of  chromosome  5  that  results  in  
problems  with  the  larynx  and  nervous  system  AND  monosomy  X  in  females  where  they  only  have  one  x  chromosome  0  
these  females  will  generally  be  short  in  stature,  lack  secondary  sexual  characteristics  and  be  infertile
...
   
 
 
LETHAL  RECESSIVES:    
Most   gene   mutations   produce   a   recessive   allele   because   they   prevent   the   gene   from   producing   a   protein   able   to  
function   in   the   body
...
 Some  recessive  mutations  are  lethal  if  they  are  not  masked  by  a  dominant  normal  allele  –  
these  lethal  recessives  generally  cause  the  early  death  of  the  embryo  or  foetus  (miscarriage  or  spontaneous  abortion)
...
   
 
 
MUTAGENS:    
(AKA   mutagenic   agents)   –   things   that   are   known   to   increase   the   rate   at   which   mutations   occur   –   i
...
  mustard   gas,  
formaldehyde,  sulfur  dioxide,  ultraviolet  light,  x-­‐rays,  cosmic  rays  and  radiation
...
   
 
 
SOMATIC  AND  GERMLINE  MUTATIONS:    

1
...

3
...

5
...

2
...


Somatic   –   the   body   cells   are   involved   –   only   the   individual   with   the   mutation   is   affected
...
   
 
Germline   –   reproductive   cells   are   affected   –   the   mutation   can   then   occur   in   the   gametes   and   thus   be   passed   onto  
subsequent   generations   –   in   this   case,   the   individual   with   the   original   mutation   may   not   be   affected
...
 If  reproduction  occurs  directly  on  one  of  those  affected  gametes,  the  
pregnancy   is   often   aborted   naturally
...
   
 
CHAPTER  13  –  BIOTECH:  
 
Genome:  the  complete  set  of  genetic  information  of  an  organism   –  for  humans  this  is  the  full  sequence  of  approx
...
   
 
DNA:   Deoxyribonucleic   acid   –   made   up   of   a   double   helix   w/   alternating   steps   of   sugars   (deoxyribose)   and  
phosphate  groups,  with  pairs  of  nitrogenous  bases  forming  cross  links  between  the  strands  (Adenine/Thymine  
and  Cytosine/Guanine)    
~   The   order/sequence   of   these   bases   is   the   genetic   information   that   determines   the   structure   of   the   cell   and   the  
way  it  functions
...
 
~  SANGER  METHOD  –  in  building  a  DNA  sequence,  each  new  nucleotide  is  bonded  to  the  hydroxyl  group  (-­‐OH)  of  
the  previous  nucleotide
...
   
Sanger  method  requires:    
Multiple  copies  of  single  stranded  DNA  
A  suitable  primer  
DNA  polymerase  (DNA  copier  –  adds  new  nucleotides  to  the  3”  end  of  the  template  strand  
A  pool  of  normal  nucleotides  
A  small  portion  of  ddTTP’s  labeled  in  some  way  –  radioactively/fluorescent  dye
...
G  –  Spastic  paraplegia  –  symptoms  show  between  20-­‐50  –  segment  of  chromosome  2  was  searched  for  affected  
point  mutation  by  comparing  to  non-­‐affected  members  of  the  family
...
   
DNA   profiling   depends   on   regions   of   non-­‐coding   DNA   that   is   polymorphic   –   shows   great   variability   between  
individuals  –  uses  STR’s
...
 Larger  pieces  
are   heavier   and   thus   travel   less   that   lighter/smaller   pieces   of   DNA   –   this   creates   a   distinctive   banding   pattern  
that  varies  from  person  to  person  allowing  the  difference  sequences  to  be  compared
...
9%  of  different  people’s  DNA  is  common  
The  other  0
...
  These   are   called  
Short  Tandem  Repeats  (STR)  
Due  to  random  mutation  these  STR  areas  vary  between  individuals  
The  length  of  specific  STR  sections  can  be  compared  to  create  an  individual  DNA  profile
...


1
...

3
...

2
...

4
...
   
 
PCR   –   Polymerase   chain   reaction   –   used   to   amplify   minute   amounts   of   DNA   using   an   enzyme   called   DNA  
polymerase  (developed  my  Kary  Mullis)
...
 
HYBRIDISATION:   Primers   (short   synthetic   DNA   fragments)   are   added   to   the   DNA     -­‐   they   bind   to   the   strand   of  
separated  DNA  acting  as  a  starting  point  for  replication
...
   
 
RECOMBINANT  DNA  TECHNOLOGY:  (genetic  engineering):  involves  the  introduction  of  DNA  into  cells  where  the  
DNA  is  foreign  or  has  been  modified  in  some  way
...
   
Stanley   Norman   Cohen   and   Herbert   Boyer   invented   the   recombinant   DNA   technique   in   1973   –   it   involves   the  
isolation   and   amplification   of   genes   or   DNA   segments   to   insert   them   into   a   bacterial   cell   –   creating   a  
TRANSGENIC  BACTERIUM
...
   
BACTERIOPHAGES/PHAGES  –  Viruses  that  infect  bacteria  cells  
Certain  enzymes  in  bacteria  are  able  to  restrict  the  duplication  of  infecting  viruses  by  cutting  them  up  –  scientists  
discovered  that  such  an  enzyme  ALWAYS  cuts  the  DNA  at  a  point  where  there  is  a  specific  sequence  of  bases  –  
this  is  known  as  the  recognition  site  while  the  enzyme  that  cuts  the  DNA  is  a  restriction  enzyme
...
 A  
straight  cut  is  when  the  restriction  enzyme  makes  a  clean  break  across  the  two  strands  of  DNA  to  make  a  blunt  
end
...
 Restriction  enzymes  that  produce  a  staggered  cut  
create  a  sticky  end
...
 
 
DNA   ligase   –   found   in   the   E
...
   
 
PROCESS  OF  RECOMBINANT  DNA:  
Isolate  the  gene  and  cut  it  out  using  a  restriction  enzyme  
Isolate  a  plasmid  from  a  bacterial  cell  and  cut  it  with  the  same  R
...
   
 
RECOMBINANT  DNA  TECH  HAS  BEEN  USED  TO  CREATE:  
Insulin  –  the  human  gene  that  contains  the  code  for  insulin  production  was  inserted  into  bacterial  cells  –  these  
bacterial  cells  became  insulin  factories  that  are  now  cultured  in  vats  –  it  is  identical  to  human  insulin  because  the  
human  gene  was  engineered  into  the  bacteria
...
 
 
CYSTIC  FIBROSIS:    
Most  common  life  threatening  disease  in  Australians  of  European  descent
...
   
Cystic  fibrosis  transmembrane  regulator  was  identified  in  1989,  and  in  1991  scientist  successfully  corrected  the  
faulty  gene  in  cultured  cells  by  adding  normal  copies  to  the  culture
...
   
The  first  experimental  CF  gene  treatment  was  given  to  a  man  in  1993  –  scientists  modified  a  rhinovirus  cell  to  act  
as  the  vector  to  carry  normal  genes  to  the  CFTR  cells  in  the  lungs
...
   
 
CELL  REPLACEMENT  THERAPY  AND  TISSUE  ENGINEERING:    
Stem   cells   are   undifferentiated   cells   that   are   capable   of   repeated   mitotic   divisions   and   if   given   the   right  
conditions,  specialization
...
 
I
...
 
Stem   cells   are   also   increasingly   being   used   for   tissue   engineering   –   the   primary   objective   of   T
...
   
TISSUE  ENGINEERING:  
Requires  an  abundant  supply  of  disease  free  cells  of  specific  types
...
  Tissue   scaffolds   serve   as   a   template  
for   tissue   growth   and   need   to   have   high   pore   sizes   that   enable   the   cells   to   grow   while   at   the   same   time   allowing  
for   the   diffusion   of   nutrients   through   the   whole   structure
...
 Once  a  scaffold  has  been  devised,  stem  cells  need  to  be  cultured
...
  As   the   new   cells   continue   to   grow   and   divide,   the   material   making   up   the   scaffold  
begins  to  degrade  or  get  absorbed
...
   
 
CHAPTER  14  –  EVOLUTIONARY  MECHANISMS:    
 
Random  assortment  –  of  chromosomes  during  meiosis  results  in  gametes  that  have  a  huge  number  of  possible  
number  combinations  of  the  chromosomes  that  originally  came  from  the  male  parent  and  the  female  parent
...
 
 
Non-­‐disjunction  –  BITCH  I  ALREADY  EXPLAINED  THIS  IN  CHAPTER  13    
 
Random  fertilization  –  each  person  produces  a  huge  number  of  different  sperm  or  eggs  (in  relation  to  potential  
variations  in  alleles)  and  because  any  sperm  can  fertilize  any  egg,  there  is  almost  an  infinite  number  of  possible  
allele  combinations
...
RANDOM   GENETIC   DRIFT (Sewall Wright effect) - The occurrence of characteristics in a population as a result
of chance rather than natural selection – occurs only in small groups
...
 Genetic  drift  takes  place  when  the  occurrence  
of  variant  forms  of  a  gene,  called  alleles,  increases  and  decreases  by  chance  over  time
...
 
Typically,   genetic   drift   occurs   in   small   populations,   where   infrequently   occurring   alleles   face   a   greater  
chance   of   being   lost
...
  Both   possibilities  
decrease  the  genetic  diversity  of  a  population
...
 In  these  cases,  genetic  drift  can  result  in  the  loss  
of  rare  alleles  and  decrease  the  gene  pool
...
 I
...
 the  Dunkers  of  Pennsylvania  that  originally  came  from  Hesse  Germany  –  their  religion  does  
not   allow   them   to   marry   outside   of   their   group   –   in   terms   of   various   physical   characteristics   such   as,   the  
frequency   of   ABO,   Rh   and   MN   blood   groups,   attached   or   free   earlobes,   mid-­‐digital   hair   and   left   or   right-­‐
handedness,   the   Dunkers   varied   in   allele   frequency   from   modern   day   Hesse   Germans   and   also   from   the  
surrounding  population  (whose  environment  was  the  same  ruling  out  natural  selection)
...
 
The  blood  group  frequencies  of  both  Bentinck  and  Bayley  point  of  the  mainland  have  been  compared  –  the  
occupants  of  Bentinck  island  show  a  very  high  proportion  of  the  Ib  allele  and  a  complete  absence  of  the  Ia  
allele  –  direct  opposition  to  the  Bayley  point  inhabitants  who  have  high  proportion  of  the  Ia  allele  and  low  
proportions   of   the   Ib   allele   –   thus   the   blood   group   frequencies   of   the   Bentinck   islanders   fall   outside   the  
range  for  Aborigines  in  the  rest  of  Australia
...
THE  FOUNDER  EFFECT  –  similar  to  genetic  drift,  the  founder  effect  occurs  when  a  small  group  of  people  
moves   away   from   its   homeland   to   a   totally   new   area   and   establishes   a   community   which   later   expands
...
  This   new   community   therefore   generally   shows   features   that   are   not   typical   of   the   original  
homeland  population
...
E
...
  Among   the  
survivors   was   a   person   heterozygous   for   a   form   of   recessive   total   colour   blindness   –   ACHROMATOPSIA   -­‐    
today   after   a   number   of   generations,   the   frequency   of   achromatopsia   in   Pingelap   is   5%   of   the   population,  
compared   to   the   0
...
  Furthermore,   30%   of   the   population   are  
carriers  for  the  disorder
...
  MIGRATION   –   gene   flow   from   one   population   to   another   –   if   immigrants   to   a   certain   country   bring   alleles  
that  are  not  already  in  the  population,  the  frequencies  for  the  alleles  of  that  gene  will  be  altered
...
E  in  the  
past   the   Chinese   population   was   RH+   -­‐   when   European   countries   began   trading   with   China,   they   introduced  
the   RH-­‐   blood   group   allele   into   the   population   –   frequency   of   the   RH-­‐   blood   group   is   still   comparatively   low  
in  China  compared  to  other  countries
...
 Prior  to  british  colonization  in  
1788,  the  indigenous  pop  of  Australia  had  no  contact  with  European  diseases  such  a  chickenpox,  small  pox  
and  influenza  and  thus  had  very  little  genetic  resistance
...
   
4
...
 As  no  two  environments  are  exactly  the  same,  the  environmental  pressures  on  
one   may   be   different   to   the   pressures   of   another   –   this   results   in   slightly   different   characteristics   being  
favoured   in   one   population   compared   to   the   other   –   these   changes   in   each   population   over   many  
generations   result   in   the   populations   becoming   less   and   less   alike   as   they   develop   characteristics   better  
suited  to  their  respective  environments
...
   

Geographical   barriers   include:   oceans,   mountain   ranges,   large   lake   systems,   deserts   and   expansive   ice  
sheets
...
   
The  Basque  people  of  the  Pyrenees  in  France  and  Spain  have  a  language  that  appears  unrelated  to  any  other
...
   
GENETIC   DISEASES   –   The   allele   that   causes   tay-­‐sachs   is   an   example   of   how   genetic   diseases   affect   allele  
frequencies   in   gene   pools
...
 It  affects  around  1/500000  births  worldwide,  but  around  1/2500  births  in  Ashkenazi  jews
...
 Another  reason  is  that  those  
who   are   heterozygous   for   Tay-­‐sachs   have   a   selective   advantage/resistance   to   tuberculosis   –   that   is,   that  
people   who   are   homozygous   for   the   dominant   normal   allele   (TT)   are   susceptible   to   TB,   those   who   are  
homozygous  for  the  recessive  lethal  allele  (tt)  are  likely  to  die  very  young  due  to  the  disease  but  those  who  
are   heterozygous     -­‐   that   is   the   lethal   recessive   is   masked   by   the   dominant   normal   allele   (Tt),   they   are   not  
affected   negatively   by   the   disease,   but   still   have   a   specific   resistance   to   TB   –   and   are   thus   more   likely   to  
reproduce  and  pass  their  genes  on  to  subsequent  generations
...
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
It   is   interesting   to   note   that   the   same   disorder   has   been   seen   in   the   Cajun   population   of   southern  
Louisiana   –   Cajuns   are   an   ethnic   group   that   have   been   reproductively   isolated   for   several   hundred   years  
because   of   language   differences   –   the   mutation   may   have   been   introduced   when   an   Ashkenazi   family  
integrated   into   the   society   who   were   carriers/affected   –   if   this   was   the   case   it   is   another   example   of   how  
migration  affects  allele  frequencies  in  populations
...
   
THE  THEORY  OF  EVOLUTION  THROUGH  NATURAL  SELECTION:    
*Evolution  is  the  gradual  change  in  the  characteristics  of  a  species  (Charles  Darwin  and  Albert  Wallace  in  1858)*  
 
Darwins  theory  of  natural  selection  was  based  on  three  observations:    
1
...
  It   is  
because  of  variation  that  survival  of  the  fittest  (more  organisms  with  favourable  characteristics  suitable  to  
survival  in  their  environment  survived  long  enough  to  reproduce  and  pass  those  characteristics  on  to  their  
children)
...
Birth  rate  –  all  living  organisms  reproduce  at  a  rate  which  exceed  the  rate  at  which  their  food  and  resource  
supply  increase  –  creates  a  struggle  for  existence  with  favourable  variations  being  preserved
...
Natures   balance   –   although   birth   rate   was   high,   each   species   numbers   tended   to   remain   at   a   relatively  
constant  level
...
  Those   organisms   that   survive   will   pass   on   their   favourable   alleles   to   their   offspring   with   the  
characteristics   of   a   population   over   an   extended   period   of   time   changing   to   be   better   suited   to   their  
environment
...
 shortlimbed/longbodied  people  of  the  
Inuit  (eskimo)
...
 
 
SPECIATION:    

-­‐
-­‐
-­‐
-­‐
-­‐
-­‐

Isolation  was  mentioned  earlier  as  a  barrier  to  gene  flow  –  reproductive  isolation  may  lead  to  the  development  of  
separate  gene  pools
...
  Thus   the   two   populations  
would   be   considered   two   separate   species
...
   
1
...
   
2
...
SELECTION   –   different   selection   pressures   act   on   each   of   the   two   populations   over   a   number   of   generations
...
SPECIATION  –  Over  a  long  period  of  time  the  changes  in  the  gene  frequencies  may  become  great  enough  that  
production   of   fertile   offspring   from   interbreeding   can   NEVER   AGAIN   OCCUR   –   at   this   point,   two   separate  
species  occur  
 
CHAPTER  15  –  EVIDENCE  FOR  EVOLUTION:    
 
SPECIATION:   When   an   ancestral   species   gives   rise   to   two   or   more   species   –   the   new   species   would   have   very  
similar  DNA  with  these  similarities  decreasing  as  the  species  gradually  change  and  mutate
...
   
Examples   of   non-­‐functional   DNA   are   endogenous   retro   viruses   (ERV)
...
  The   DNA   then  
becomes   inserted   into   one   of   the   host   cells   chromosomes
...
   
Scientists   have   found   16   instances   of   the   exact   same   retrovirus   in   the   same   places   in   both   humans   and  
chimpanzees  –  short  arms  of  chromosomes  10,  1  and  6  and  the  long  arm  of  chromosome  9  –  this  is  compelling  
evidence   of   shared   ancestry   as   any   retrovirus   inserted   into   the   genome   of   a   common   ancestor   would   be  
inherited  by  subsequent  species  branches  on  the  exact  same  arm  of  chromosomes
...
   
Most  of  the  cells  DNA  is  found  in  the  nucleus,  but  a  small  amount  is  found  in  the  mitochondria  –  mtDNA  
mtDNA   is   found   in   the   form   of   small   circular   molecules   –   there   are   5-­‐10   of   these   molecules   in   each  
mitochondrion
...
  The   other   13   have   instructions   for   making   some   of   the   enzymes   necessary   for   cellular   respiration  
reactions  
Some  rare  diseases  are  caused  by  mutations  in  the  mtDNA  
Most  cells  contain  large  numbers  of  mitochondria  and  therefore  around  500-­‐1000  copies  of  mtDNA  molecule  –  
this  makes  it  a  lot  easier  to  find  and  extract  than  DNA  from  the  nucleus  so  smaller  samples  can  be  used
...
  DNA   found   in   the   mitochondria   also   has   a   higher   rate   of   mutation   than  
nuclear   DNA   –   meaning   that   human   mtDNA   has   been   slowly   diverging   from   the   mtDNA   of   our   original   female  
ancestor   –   scientists   are   thus   able   to   use   the   similarities   between   the   mtDNA   of   any   2   individuals   to   estimate  
their  genetic  closeness
...
   
 
PROTEIN  SEQUENCES:    
 

-­‐
-­‐
-­‐

-­‐

Proteins   consist   of   long   chains   amino   acids   (from   a   few   hundred   –   thousands)     -­‐   linking   together   particular  
amino  acids  in  a  precise  order  determined  by  DNA  creates  these  proteins  –  thousands  of  types  of  proteins  exist  
in  all  living  things  created  from  20  kinds  of  amino  acids
...
 The  
longer   the   period   of   time   involved   since   two   given   species   have   evolved   from   a   common   ancestor,   the   more  
differences  there  should  be  in  their  amino  acid  sequences
...
   
 
Cytochrome   C   is   one   such   example   of   a   ubiquitous   protein   –   human   cytochrome   has   104   amino   acids   –  
regardless   of   the   species   tested,   34   of   these   have   been   found   in   the   same   positions   in   every   cytochrome   C  
molecule   that’s   been   sequenced   –   strongly   suggesting   that   these   proteins   have   descended   from   an   ancestral  
cytochrome  C  molecule  found  in  a  primitive  microbe  that  existed  more  than  2000  million  years  ago
...
 The  cytochrome  C  of  chimps  and  gorillas  is  the  same  
as  that  for  humans  while  for  rhesus  monkeys,  it  differs  by  only  one  amino  acid
...
   
 
COMPARATIVE  GENOMICS:    
 
Is   a   relatively   new   field   of   bio-­‐research   where   the   genome   sequences   of   different   species   are   compared   –   by  
comparing   the   sequence   of   the   human   genome   with   the   genomes   of   other   organisms,   researchers   are   able   to  
identify   regions   of   similarity   and   difference
...
   
By  analyzing  the  genomic  features  of  different  species  that  have  been  preserved  for  millions  of  years,  researchers  
are  beginning  to  be  able  to  tease  apart  the  subtle  differences  between  animal  species  –  it  has  also  been  used  to  
reveal  the  diversity  of  gene  composition  in  different  evolutionary  lineages
...
   
 
EMBRYOLOGY:    
 
Comparing  the  very  early  stages  of  development  of  organisms
...
 
Fish,   reptiles,   birds,   pigs   and   humans   all   have   gill   pouches   and   arches   as   early   embryos   despite   the   latter   four  
having  lungs  for  breathing  air  and  no  aquatic  larvae  in  later  life  –  the  presence  of  these  structures  is  significant  if  
they  are  viewed  as  an  evolutionary  series  that  began  with  fish  hundreds  of  millions  of  years  ago  with  evolution  
resulting  in  their  divergence  later
...
   

-­‐

Common   to   all   vertebrate   embryos   too   are   two   chambered   hearts   and   similar   brain   development   –   adding   up   to  
striking  evidence  for  common  ancestry  with  later  evolution  along  different  pathways
...
 
These   similarities   are   evidence   that   life   on   Earth   has   a  common   ancient   ancestor  that   the   diverse   species   have  
evolved  from  over  time
...
 
The   more   closely   the   organisms   are   related,   the   more   similar   the   homologous   structures   between   organisms
...
  The   bone  
structure  within  those  limbs  are  similar  between  closely  related  species
...
  The   flipper   of   a   whale,   the   wing   of   a   bat,   and   the   leg   of   a   cat   are   all  
very  similar  to  the  human  arm
...
 All  of  the  species  also  have  a  collection  of  
smaller  bones  in  the  "wrist"  area  (these  are  called  carpal  bones  in  humans)  that  lead  into  the  long  "fingers"  or  
phalanges
...
 The  homologous  limbs  can  be  used  for  flying,  swimming,  walking,  or  everything  humans  do  with  
their   arms
...
 Whales  were  once  classified  as  a  fish  
since   they   live   in   the   water   and   have   flippers
...
 In  fact,  it  seems  whales  are  much  more  closely  related  to  hippos  than  fish
...
  Everything   with  
wings   were   put   into   the   same   branch   of   the   phylogenetic   tree
...
 Even  though  they  have  the  
same  function,  to  make  the  organism  be  able  to  get  airborne  and  fly,  they  are  structurally  very  different
...
 
Therefore,  bats  are  more  closely  related  to  humans  than  birds  or  insects  and  were  moved  to  their  corresponding  
branch  on  the  phylogenetic  tree  of  life
...
e
...

2
...

4
...

6
...

8
...


Nictitating  membrane  (pinkish  membrane  found  in  inner  corner  of  eye)    
Muscles  to  move  ears  
Pointed  canine  and  wisdom  tooth  
Hair  on  body  
Nipples  on  male  
Segmentation  of  abdominal  muscles  
Appendix  
Pyramidalis  muscles  above  pubic  area  
Coccyx  (fused  tail  bone  area)    
They   are   what   remains   of   organs   that   were   functional   in   ancestral   forms   –   over   time   and   with   changing  
environmental   conditions,   such   organs   were   no   longer   essential   to   survival   and   gradually   reduced   to   vestigial  
remnants;  however  as  they  are  not  harmful  in  any  way,  they  have  not  been  completely  eliminated
...
   
CHAPTER  16  –  FOSSIL  EVIDENCE  FOR  EVOLUTION:    
One  of  the  crucial  pieces  of  evidence  for  evolution,  the  gradual  change  in  characteristics  of  organisms  over  time,  
is  the  record  of  those  changes  left  in  the  form  of  fossils
...
 Other  material  associated  with  the  bones,  such  as  the  rock  they  were  found  in  and  fossils  
of  other  plants  and  animals  allows  the  scientist  to  develop  a  picture  of  life  in  the  past  –  what  they  ate,  what  other  
things  existed  at  the  same  time  and  sometimes  even  what  the  climate  was  like
...
   
FOSSILFORMATION:    
Normally   dead   organisms   are   decayed   by   micro-­‐organisms   and   no   trace   of   their   existence   is   left
...
   
In  wet,  acid  soils,  the  minerals  of  the  bone  are  dissolved  and  no  fossilisation  occurs,  however  if  such  soil  contains  
no   oxygen   (i
...
  peat)   complete   preservation   of   the   soft   tissues   and   bones   of   the   organism   may   occur
...
   
FOUR  CONDITIONS  REQUIRED  FOR  FOSSIL  FORMATION:  
1
...

3
...


A  quick  burial  of  the  material  
The  presence  of  hard  body  parts  
An  absence  of  decay  organisms  
A  long  period  of  stability  –  the  organism  needs  to  be  left  undisturbed  
DISCOVERY  OF  FOSSILS:  
Small  hand  tools  are  used  to  gently  remove  the  soil  so  as  not  to  damage  any  of  the  material  (the  soil  is  usually  
then  sieved)
...
 In  the  
laboratory,   fossils   are   carefully   scraped   clean   ,   broken   parts   are   pieced   together,   measurements   are   made   and  
plaster  casts/latex  moulds  may  be  made
...
  Some   methods   of   dating   provide   absolute   dates   –  the  actual  age  of  the  specimen  in  years  
–  or  relative  dates  –  which  tell  us  if  one  sample  is  older/younger  than  another
...
  Potassium   is   a   mixture   of   three  
different  forms  with  atomic  weights  39,  40  and  41
...
 P-­‐A  dating  has  limited  usefulness  however  as    not  all  rock  

types  are  suitable  for  this  method  of  dating  and  it  can  only  date  rocks  older  than  100  000  –  200  000  years  (at  the  
earlier   date   of   100   000   years,   only   0
...
    To   determine   the   age   of   a   fossil   using   this   method,   a   suitable   rock   of  
the  same  age  must  be  available  –  this  occurs  when  rocks  produced  in  volcanic  eruptions  bury  bones
...
 Carbon  14  is  produced  in  the  
upper   atmosphere   by   the   action   of   cosmic   radiation   on   nitrogen   at   about   the   same   rate   that   it   decays
...
  When   plants   use   atmospheric   carbon   dioxide   in   photosynthesis,   one   atom   in   every   trillion   of   the  
carbon   atoms   incorporated   is   carbon-­‐14
...
 With  death,  an  organisms  intake  of  carbon  14  ceases,  but  the  carbon  14  already  in  the  tissues  
continues   to   decay   at   a   fixed   rate   –   by   measuring   the   amount   of   radiation   liberated   by   a   sample,   the   ratio   of  
carbon  14  –  carbon  12  can  be  estimated  and  from  this,  the  age  of  the  sample  can  be  calculated
...
   
A  more  refined  technique  called  the  ACCELORATOR  MASS  SPECTROMETRY  (AMS)  RADIOCARBON  DATING  can  
be   used   to   date   a   sample   as   small   as   100micro   grams   by   breaking   the   sample   up   into   its   constituent   atoms   so  
that  the  number  of  atoms  of  each  isotope  of  carbon  can  be  counted
...
   

DATING  METHOD  

MATERIAL  USED  

Tree  growth  rings  

Wood  

Up  to  9000  

Carbon  -­‐14  

Carbon  compounds  

Up  to  60  000  

Protactinium  

Sea  sediments  

Up  to  250  000  

Uranium-­‐thorium  

Sea  sediments,  coral  

Up  to  600  000  

Potassium-­‐argon  

Volcanic  deposits  

200  000  and  earlier  

Electron  spin  resonance  

Fission  tracks  
Thermoluminescence  

USEFUL  RANGE  (YEARS  BP)  

Calcium  carbonate,  quartz  
and  flint  

Between  100  000  and  300  000  

Minerals  and  glass  

100  years  ago  to  4550  million  

Sediments,  lava,  ceramics  

300  years  ago  to  100  000  

 
After  about  70  000  years  radiocarbon  dating  is  null  and  void  because  the  amount  of  carbon  14  left  is  negligible   –  
therefore   radiocarbon   dating   cannot   be   used   to   date   back   more   than   60000   years   –   another   limitation   is   that  
material  to  be  dated  must  contain  organic  carbon  compounds
...


2
...
   
The   correlation   of   rock   strata   –   involves   matching   layers   of   rock   from   different   areas   –   matching   can   be   done   by  
examining  the  rock  itself  and  also  by  studying  the  fossils  it  contains
...
  Certain   fossils   are   of   great   value   in   correlation   studies   as   they   are   widely  
distributed  and  present  for  only  a  limited  period  of  time  –  they  are  called  index  fossils  (i
...
 a  trilobite  fossil)
...
 All  the  fossil  bones  in  a  particular  deposit  should  have  the  same  
amount   of   fluoride   and   so   fossils   that   have   been   displaced   can   be   detected   –   the   older   the   fossil,   the   more  
fluoride  it  should  contain  and  so  the  relative  ages  can  be  established
...
 Closely  related  groups  are  placed  on  branches  close  to  eachother  –  keep  in  
mind   however   that   these   are   only   inferred   relationships;   different   researchers   may   come   up   with   different   trees  
to  fit  their  interpretation  of  the  data
...
 In  studying  the  origins  of  
humans,   we   are   only   interested   in   the   Cainozoic   era   as   this   is   when   the   primates   (the   group   modern   humans  
belongs  to)  started  to  evolve
...
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
  -­‐  interesting  –  the  ancestors  of  modern  humans  that  made  those  footprints  were  walking  much  the  same  way  as  
we   do   now   –   BIPEDAL   LOCOMOTION   –   or   walking   upright   on   2   legs   –   differs   from   other   great   apes   who   used  
QUADRAPEDAL  LOCOMOTION
...

2
...

4
...

6
...
   
Humans  as  such  are  classified  as  HOMININS,  belonging  to  the  tribe  HOMININI
...
   
 
 

FAMILY  
HYLOBATIDAE  
 
 
 
 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 
SUBFAMILY  
PONGINAE  

GIBBONS  AND  
 
THEIR  EXTINCT  
ANCESTORS  
 
 

FAMILY  
HOMINIDAE  

SUBFAMILY  
HOMININAE  

 
 
 
 

ORANGUTANS  
AND  THEIR  
EXTINCT  
ANCESTORS  

TRIBE  
GORILLINI  

GORILLAS  
AND  THEIR  
EXTINCT  
ANCESTORS  

TRIBE  
PANINI  

CHIMPANZEES  
AND  THEIR  
EXTINCT  
ANCESTORS  

TRIBE  
HOMININI  

HUMANS  AND  
THEIR  
EXTINCT  
ANCESTORS  

EVOLUTIONARY  TRENDS:    
 
Apes   and   humans   share   a   common   ancestor   –   an   ape   like   creature   –   from   these   the   first   hominins   evolved   –  
AUSTRALOPITHECINES  –  hominins  classified  in  the  genus  Australopithicus
...
 
 
ADAPTIONS  FOR  ERECT  POSTURE:    
 
An   adaption   is   any   characteristic   that   helps   an   organism   survive   and   reproduce   in   its   natural   environment  –   erect   posture  
helped  our  human  ancestors  survive
...
POSITION  OF  THE  FORAMEN  MAGNUM   –   where   the   brain   meets   the   spinal   cord,   there   is   a   hole  in   the   skull  called  the  
foramen   magnum   –   in   quadrupeds,   its   situated   in   the   centre   back   of   the   skull   (creates   c   shaped   spine),   whereas   in  
humans   its   gradually   moved   forward   (to   centre   bottom   of   skull)   so   that   the   skull   can   be   balanced   ON   TOP   of   the  
vertebral   column   -­‐   gorillas   need   large   neck   muscles   to   hold   the   head   in   place   as   it   overhangs   the   chest   whereas   in  
humans,  the  weight  of  the  skull  is  borne  by  the  vertebral  column  and  so  large  neck  muscles  are  not  required
...
 CURVATURE  OF  THE  SPINAL  COLUMN  –  humans  have  a  double  curvature  giving  the  spine  its  distinctive  ‘s’  shape
...
 
3
...
   
4
...
 The  pelvis  in  humans  is  broader  and  
shorter  –  from  top  to  bottom  –  than  in  apes  and  bowl  shaped
...
   
5
...
 This  allows  the  weight  to  be  transferred  from  the  pelvis  to  the  legs
...
  Because   the   pelvis   is   broad,   the   hip   sockets   are   far  
apart,   but   the   femurs   tend   to   converge   inwards   at   the   knee   –   this   arrangement   of   the   femurs   forms   an   angle   to   the  
vertical   (carrying   angle)   which   ensures   that   weight   distribution   remains   close   to   the   central   axis   of   the   body   when  
walking   –   this   arrangement   also   allows     for   greater   stability   when   walking   as   it   enables   the   body   to   be   rotated   around  
the   lower   leg   and   foot   AND   for   each   footstep   to   follow   a   more-­‐or-­‐less   straight   line   (enabling   humans   a   striding   gait  
rather  than  the  swaying  gait  of  chimps  and  gorillas)
...


7
...

9
...
  The   knee   is   a   2   part  
hinge   joint   –   because   the   weight   is   transmitted   to   the   outer   hinge   –   it   is   bigger   and   stronger   than   the   inner   hinge
...
   
THE   FOOT   –   from   the   knee   joint   most   of   the   weight   of   the   body   is   transmitted   through   the   tibia   (the   larger   and  
stronger   of   the   2   lower   leg   bones)   to   the   ankle
...
 We  have  developed  the  transverse  arch  (side  to  side)  that  apes  do  not  have  in  
addition  to  the  longitudinal  arch  of  all  apes  (front  to  back)
...
   
STANCE   AND   LOCOMOTION   –   striding   gait   =   walking   upright   with   the   hip   and   knee   fully   straightened   –   apes   when  
walking  upright  push  their  hips  forward  and  bend  their  knees  to  counter  balance  and  lower  centre  of  gravity
...
e
...
   

 
CHAPTER  19  –  HUMAN  ANCESTORS:    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

AUSTRALOPITHICUS  AFARENSIS  

AUSTRALOPITHECUS  AFRICANUS  

 
 
 

 

 

PARENTHROPUS  AETHIOPUS  

 
 

HOMO  
HABILIS  

 
 
 
 

HOMO  RUDOLFENSIS  

PARENTHROPUS  
ROBUSTUS  

PARENTHROPUS  
BOISEI    

 
 
 
 
 

HOMO  ERGASTER    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

HOMO  ERECTUS  

HOMO  
HEIDELBERGENSIS  

 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 

HOMO  
SAPIENS  (in  
Africa)    

 

HOMO  
NEANDERTHALUS  
(in  Europe)    

ADVANTAGES  OF  BIPEDAL  LOCOMOTION:    
1
...
Increased  size,  deterring  predators  
3
...
Higher  reach  when  picking  fruit  from  trees  
5
...
   
 
FEATURES  OF  AUSTRALOPITHICENES  (TAUNG  MAN  
EXAMPLE)    
1
...
Skull  w as  more  rounded  
3
...
More  forward  position  of  the  foramen  magnum  
5
...
More  prognathic  than  modern  humans  
7
...
 

7
...

9
...
Africanus/Afarensus  –  Lucy)    
• 120-­‐140  cm  tall  
• 25-­‐35kgs  
• teeth  were  more  in  proportion  to  eachother  
• jaw  muscles  were  smaller  
 
HOMO  HABILIS  (HANDY  MAN)  
~  thought  to  be  the  earliest  tool  user  
~  taller  than  gracile  forms  
~  stood  more  erect  
~  belonged  to  the  homo  genus  and  existed/lived  along  side  robust  australopithicenes  (1
...
 600-­‐775  cm3  
 
HOMO  ERECTUS  (UPRIGHT  MAN)    
~  thought  to  be  the  first  species  to  use  fire  
~  average  brain  size  1075  cm3  
~  dental  arcade  was  shorter  and  more  rounded  in  shape  (apes  are  parabolic)  
~  jaw  was  shorter  and  more  compact  w/  evidence  of  a  developing  chin  
 
FOOTPRINTS   IN   ILERET   KENYA   –   OLDEST   RECORDED   FOSSILS   OF   MODERN   HUMAN   FOOTPRINTS   –   BELONGED  
TO  HOMO  ERGASTAR  1
...
8-­‐1
...
6-­‐1
...
8MYA  –  250  000  YA  
HOMO  ANTECESSOR  =  750  000  YA  
HOMO  HEIDELBERGENSIS  =  450  000  YA  
 
DENTITION  OF  THE  AUSTRALOPITHICENES:    
1
...
The  first  premolar  was  typically  more  ape  like  –  some  specimens  only  had  one  cusp  rather  than  two  
3
...
the  femur  of  the  australopithecine  was  angled  so  the  foot  was  under  the  centre  of  gravity  
2
...
5m  tall  
• barrel  chest  
• slightly  larger  brain  (1485  cm3  compared  to  our  1350  cm3)  
 
CROMAGNON  PEOPLE:  
• one  of  the  earliest  examples  of  homo  sapiens  
• stone  tools  (AURIGNACIAN  TOOLS)  
• 40  000-­‐12  000  ya  
• skulls  were  shorter  from  front-­‐back,  higher  in  the  top  region  of  the  skull  and  rounder  at  the  back  
• less  prominent  brow  ridges,  smaller  jaw  and  less  projected  
• teeth  were  smaller  and  chin  had  developed  
 
CHAPTER  20  –  CULTURAL  EVOLUTION:    
 
AUSTRALOPITHECINE  CULTURE:    
• OLDOWAN  period  
• Home  bases  
• Range  of  pebble  tools  dating  back  2
...
   

Early  homo  had  a  bulge  in  the  speech  production  centre  of  the  brain  –  larynx  may  not  have  been  capable  of  making  
complex  sounds
...
Keeps  away  predators  
2
...
Cooking  away  germs  –  digestible  and  taste  better  
4
...
6-­‐1
...
7  MYA-­‐200  000  YA  –  ACHEULIAN  
NEANDERTHAL  –  200  000-­‐40  000  YA  –  MOUSETTARIAN  (FLAKE  TOOLS)  
CROMAGNON  –  43  000  -­‐26  000  –  AURIGNACIAN  (BLADE  TOOLS)  
                       -­‐  22  000-­‐19  000  –  SOULTERIAN  (PRESSURE  FLAKING)  
 
                       -­‐  18  000-­‐12  000  –  MAGDALENIAN  (BONE  AND  ANTLER  TOOLS/ARTWORK)    
 
THE  BEGINNINGS  OF  AGRICULTURE:  
-­‐ Neolithic  revolution  
-­‐ Domestication   of   plants   and   animals   –   sheep   were   domesticated   first   –   11   000   ya   and   the  
hybridization   of   wild   goat   grass   and   wild   wheat   to   create   the   fertile   Emmer   was   the   first  
domesticated  plant  
 


Title: HUMAN BIOLOGY REVISON NOTES
Description: literally just 47 pages of human bio notes covering everything from: Chemical messengers Hormones secreted from organs other than your pituitary Parts of a neuron and their functions Structural types of neurons and their processes Divisions of the nervous system The CNS in depth How the body detects and regulates internal changes Disruptions to homeostasis Protections against invaders Specific resistances to infection Mutations and gene pools Biotech Evolutionary mechanisms Evidence for evolution (broad) Fossil evidence for evolution (narrow) Evolutionary trends in hominins Human ancestors and Cultural trends in Humans