In this course we explore evolutionary theory as it applies to humans and their past. Every week there are new finds which are changing how we think about human history and our relationships with the environment but making sense of these discoveries relies upon understanding evolutionary theory and how it applies to a social species with culture. Students will be introduced to important concepts such as life history theory and niche construction and review others, like natural selection, gene flow, and genetic drift. They will become familiar with the bases of evidence for human evolution including spending time in the lab with fossil casts. Students will learn that answers to most of the important questions we ask are incomplete and debated but learn that understanding evolution, particularly as it applies to humans, is central to analysing our past, present, and future. Take advantage of things you are learning here and elsewhere to ask useful questions. Think about the kinds of evidence required to evaluate them. These are challenging tasks but exciting too and this course is designed to give you practical and analytical skills.
This course is a central to biological anthropology but is more broadly important to anthropology, particularly archaeology, as well as related subjects in science and arts such as biological sciences, philosophy of science, psychology.
Course delivery is two one-hour of lectures (recorded) every week and two hours of lab every fortnight beginning in week two. Laboratories will introduce you to the fossil material in a practical hands-on session while lectures will focus upon particularly salient evolutionary questions around those fossils.