Navigation » List of Schools » Los Angeles Valley College » Anthropology » Anthropology 101 – Human Biological Evolution » Winter 2020 » Quiz 3
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A Mutations that occur in the protein-coding region of the genome and result in a change in the amino acid sequence of the protein produced
B These are changes that also occur in the protein-coding region of the genome but don’t result in a change in amino acid sequence of the protein being produced.
C A set of genetic variants located on a single stretch of the genome.
D A measure of how many genes within a diploid genome are made up of more than the same variant for a gene.
Question #2
A The stone tool industry of Neanderthals and their contemporaries in Africa and Western Asia.
B The series of steps a food takes from location where it is produced to the store where it is sold to consumers.
C The outside, or rough outer covering, of a rock. Usually the cortex is removed during the process of stone tool creation.
D A distinctive technique of stone tool manufacturing used by archaic Homo sapiens, including Neanderthals.
Question #3
A This is the movement of genes from one species to the gene pool of another species through hybridization between the species and backcross into the parental population by hybrid offspring.
B A measure of how many genes within a diploid genome are made up of more than the same variant for a gene.
C A form of dwarfism that occurs when a limited geographic region, such as an island, causes a largebodied animal to be selected for a smaller body size.
D A colundular sample of soil and sediments that can be analyzed to study plant and animal presence in a location, or more broadly to determine a regional environment.
Question #4
A The stone tool industry of Neanderthals and their contemporaries in Africa and Western Asia.
B A natural clay pigment mixed with ferric oxide and clay and sand. Ranges in color from brown to red to orange.
C The outside, or rough outer covering, of a rock. Usually the cortex is removed during the process of stone tool creation.
D A distinctive technique of stone tool manufacturing used by archaic Homo sapiens, including Neanderthals.
Question #5
A DNA that originates from sources outside of the specimen you are trying to sequence.
B This is the process of exchange of DNA between two strands to produce new sequence arrangements.
C Mutations that occur in the protein-coding region of the genome and result in a change in the amino acid sequence of the protein produced.
D Mutations that occur in the protein-coding region of the genome and result in a change in the amino acid sequence of the protein produced.
Question #6
A A form of ancient DNA in which DNA originates from the specimen being examined.
B This is the process of exchange of DNA between two strands to produce new sequence arrangements.
C DNA that originates from sources outside of the specimen you are trying to sequence.
D Mutations that occur in the protein-coding region of the genome and result in a change in the amino acid sequence of the protein produced.
Question #7
A The earliest described archaeological period, whereby we start seeing stone tool technology.
B The concept that evolutionary change does not occur homogeneously throughout the body in organisms.
C A single specimen from which a species or taxon is described or named.
D A period of milder climate in between two glacials.
Question #8
A The concept that evolutionary change does not occur homogeneously throughout the body in organisms.
B A taxon or group of taxa descended from a common ancestor which is not shared with another taxon or group.
C An environment from a period in the Earth’s geological past.
D The study of the evolutionary relationships between groups of organisms
Question #9
A The study of the form or size and shape of things (in this case, skeletal parts).
B A taxon or group of taxa descended from a common ancestor which is not shared with another taxon or group.
C An organism with extremely large dentition compared with body size.
D The study of phylogeny.
Question #10
A An organism with extremely large dentition compared with body size.
B The hypothetical final ancestor (or ancestral population) of two or more taxa before their divergence.
C A primate which includes humans and our fossil relatives and, in more recent definitions, other Great Apes.
D A primate which includes humans and our fossil relatives since our divergence from extant Great Apes.
Question #11
A A technique to describe the number of incisors, canines, premolars and molars in each quadrant of the mouth.
B A Gap between the incisors and canines.
C The “bumps” on the teeth.
D The highly mineralized outer layer of the tooth.
Question #12
A The field of grouping organisms into those of shared ancestry.
B A newly evolved trait, or differing from that seen in the ancestor.
C A group of species or taxa with a shared common ancestor.
D Differences in the traits that occur in populations across a geographical area.
Question #13
A The increase of population density as people settled together in cities.
B The rapid change in global climate, especially a cooling of the Northern Hemisphere, 13,000 years ago.
C Time of rapid change to human cultures due to the invention of agriculture, starting around 12,000 years ago.
D Theory that modern Homo sapiens expanded from Africa to cover the rest of the world without interacting with archaic humans.
Question #14
A Time period following the Middle Stone Age with a diversification in tool types, starting around 50,000 years ago.
B Time period known for Mousterian lithics that connects African archaic to modern Homo sapiens
C Time of rapid change to human cultures due to the invention of agriculture, starting around 12,000 years ago.
D The time 23,000 years ago when the most recent ice age was the most intense.
Question #15
A Theory that modern Homo sapiens evolved simultaneously in Africa, Asia, and Europe from archaic populations.
B Theory that the first Paleoindians crossed to the Americas by following the southern coast of Beringia.
C Current theory of modern human origins stating that the species evolved first in Africa and interbred with archaic humans of Europe and Asia.
D Theory that modern H. sapiens expanded from East Africa by crossing the Red Sea and following the coast east across Asia.
Question #16
A Time of rapid change to human cultures due to the invention of agriculture, starting around 12,000 years ago.
B Composed from a mix or composite of traits.
C The eastern coast of the Mediterranean.
D Time period following the Middle Stone Age with a diversification in tool types, starting around 50,000 years ago.
Question #17
A A concept developed by society that is maintained over time through social interactions that make the idea seem “real.”
B Human organization without strict ranks. Foraging societies tend to be more egalitarian than those based on other subsistence strategies.
C Differences in the traits that occur in populations across a geographical area.
D People in a society who claim a distinct identity for themselves based on shared cultural characteristics and ancestry.
Question #18
A Theory that people were genetically isolated in Beringia before expanding to the Americas.
B Current theory of modern human origins stating that the species evolved first in Africa and interbred with archaic humans of Europe and Asia.
C An explanation for the origin or history of the world.
D The idea that modern Homo sapiens evolved as a complex web of small regional populations with sporadic gene flow among them
Question #19
A Having a rounded appearance. Increased globularity of the braincase is a trait of modern Homo sapiens.
B A handheld spear thrower that increased the force of thrown projectiles.
C Having a smooth and slender quality; the opposite of robust.
D A small group of people living together as foragers.
Question #20
A Having a rounded appearance. Increased globularity of the braincase is a trait of modern Homo sapiens.
B A dental formal only found in the Greater Apes.
C Damage to tooth enamel due to the waste products of built-up bacteria. Known in the general public as cavities.
D The developmental milestone reached by typical humans during prepubescence.
Question #21
A Microscopic ridges on the surface of tooth enamel that serve as markers of tooth development.
B Condition where the lower face and jaw protrude forward from a vertical plane
C Different characteristics evolve at different rates and appear at different stages
D A thickened area along the top of the skull.
Question #22
A A ridge on the occipital bone in the back of the skull.
B A thickened area along the top of the skull.
C Tool industry characterized by teardrop-shaped stone handaxes flaked on both sides.
D Microscopic ridges on the surface of tooth enamel that serve as markers of tooth development.
Question #23
A A ridge on the occipital bone in the back of the skull.
B A thickened area along the top of the skull.
C Condition where the lower face and jaw protrude forward from a vertical plane.
D Microscopic ridges on the surface of tooth enamel that serve as markers of tooth development.
Question #24
A Different characteristics evolve at different rates and appear at different stages.
B An object or being that has human characteristics.
C Religious systems that recognize several gods.
D Geological epoch dating from 2.6 million years ago to about 11,000 years ago.
Question #25
A Earliest stone-tool industry consisting of simple flakes and choppers.
B An object or being that has human characteristics.
C Tool industry characterized by teardrop-shaped stone handaxes flaked on both sides.
D A thickened area along the top of the skull.