Evolutionary Ecology of Hominins
Human Palaeosystems in Focus Seminar Series
- Date: Oct 1, 2024
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Rob Foley (University of Cambridge)
- Location: Online
- Host: Human Palaeosystems Research Group
- Contact: kutowsky@gea.mpg.de
It is a fundamental principle of evolutionary biology that environment and ecology are major drivers, and this is as true for hominins as any other group of organisms. However, this can mean anything from broad correlations between climate and the emergence of new taxa to linkages between isotopes and morphological traits. Given that hominin evolution covers around seven million years, multiple taxa, many significant changes in range distribution, population size, habitat preference and diet, as well as increasing dependence upon technology, it is necessary to consider more precisely the way in which environment and resources influence evolutionary processes and outcomes. This talk will explore how different elements of the ecological context shaped macroevolutionary processes in hominin evolution.
About the Speaker
Professor Robert Foley is based at Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies at the University of Cambridge, a centre which was co-founded with Professor Marta Mirazón Lahr in 2001. Robert is an evolutionary and biological anthropologist, who has contributed extensively to the development of the African origin of modern humans field of research, working across fossils, genetics and archaeology. His research has enabled an understanding of how multiple dispersals of early humans out of Africa led to the evolution of our species and our diversity, emphasising the role of geographical factors in shaping human evolution. He has co-led numerous expeditions and archaeological excavations across the world, including the Solomon Islands, the Central Sahara, and Kenya, particularly in the Turkana Basin where he continues to work now.