Navigation » List of Schools » Los Angeles Valley College » Anthropology » Anthropology 101 – Human Biological Evolution » Winter 2020 » Quiz 2
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A Dental condition found in modern strepsirrhines in which the lower incisors and canines are laterally compressed and protrude forward at a nearly horizontal inclination
B Dental condition in which the cusps of molar teeth form ridges (or lophs) separated from each other by valleys.
C The rounded bony floor of the middle ear cavity.
D Space between adjacent teeth.
Question #2
A Group containing catarrhines, platyrrhines, and tarsiers.
B Order: Primates; Superfamily: Omomyoidea. One of the earliest groups of euprimates (true primates; earliest record in the early Eocene).
C Group containing monkeys and apes, including humans.
D Modern humans and any extinct relatives more closely related to us than to chimpanzees.
Question #3
A Dental condition found in modern strepsirrhines in which the lower incisors and canines are laterally compressed and protrude forward at a nearly horizontal inclination.
B The ecological interaction between whole groups of species with whole groups of other species.
C The features that allow you to recognize a group.
D Dental condition where at least one of the lower cheek-teeth (molars or premolars) is a laterally compressed blade.
Question #4
A The independent evolution of a morphological feature in animals not closely related.
B The ecological interaction between whole groups of species (e.g., primates) with whole groups of other species.
C A subsistence system based on the small-scale cultivation of crops intended primarily for the direct consumption of the household or immediate community
D Smallest monophyletic group (clade) containing a specified set of extant taxa and all descendants of their last common ancestor.
Question #5
A Group containing catarrhines, platyrrhines, and tarsiers.
B Order: Primates; Superfamily: Omomyoidea.
C Space between adjacent teeth.
D Taxa are basal to a given crown group but are more closely related to the crown group than to the closest living sister taxon of the crown group.
Question #6
A Group containing catarrhines, platyrrhines, and tarsiers.
B Order: Primates. True primates or primates of modern aspect
C Group containing monkeys and apes, including humans.
D Group containing all of the descendants of a single ancestor
Question #7
A Competition between sperm of two or more different males to fertilize the same egg.
B When males and females of a species have different morphological traits.
C The selection for traits that increase mating success. This occurs via intersexual selection and intrasexual selection.
D Area of the hindquarters that change in size, shape and often color over the course of a female’s reproductive cycle, reaching maximum size at ovulation.
Question #8
A When males and females of a species have similar morphological traits.
B All living organisms that occur in an area that includes primates.
C An individual’s genetic contribution to future generations.
D When males and females of a species have different morphological traits.
Question #9
A Associations between two or more different species involving behavioral changes by at least one of the associated species
B A mating system in which multiple males mate with a single breeding female.
C A mating system in which multiple males mate with multiple females.
D A mating system in which one male mates with multiple females.
Question #10
A The length of time between successive births.
B A way of describing which male(s) and female(s) mate.
C The killing of infants of one’s own species.
D Emigrating from the group into which one is born.
Question #11
A Members of the same species.
B The ability of all individuals of the species to both send and receive messages; a feature of some species’ communication systems
C Two or more species that do not overlap in geographic distribution.
D To leave one’s group or area. This may or may not involve entering another group
Question #12
A The idea that two species that compete for the exact same resources cannot coexist
B A variety of speech. The term is often applied to a subordinate variety of a language. Speakers of two dialects of the same language do not necessarily always understand each other.
C A description of non-aggressive social interactions and associations between individuals.
D The transmission of behavior from one generation to the next through observation and imitation.
Question #13
A Bony projection at the elbow end of the ulna.
B When a species exhibits sex differences in morphology, behavior, hormones, and/or coloration.
C The relationship between a symbol and its referent (meaning), in which there is no obvious connection between them.
D The behavior of rubbing scent glands or urine onto objects as a way of communicating with others.
Question #14
A Sharpened ridges that connect cusps on a bilophodont molar.
B A trait that has been inherited from a distant ancestor.
C Wet noses; produced when the nose is connected to the upper lip.
D Having the ability to see reds, yellows, blues, greens, and ultraviolet.
Question #15
A Bony projection at the elbow end of the ulna.
B When two or more taxa share characteristics because they inherited them from a common ancestor.
C Refers to an organism’s pace of growth, reproduction, lifespan, etc.
D Having five digits or fingers and toes.
Question #16
A A space between the teeth, usually for large canines to fit when the mouth is closed.
B Being able to see only blues and greens.
C A trait that is useful for a wide range of tasks.
D Having a diet consisting primarily of gums and saps.
Question #17
A A grouping based on overall similarity in lifestyle, appearance, and behavior.
B Having different types of teeth.
C The number of each type of tooth in one quadrant of the mouth, written as number of incisors: canines: premolars: molars.
D The bumps on the chewing surface of the premolars and molars, which can be quite sharp in some species.
Question #18
A How an organism moves around.
B Bony projection at the elbow end of the ulna.
C A form of locomotion in which the organism swings below branches using the forelimbs
D A flattened area of the ischium on the pelvis over which calluses form; functioning as seat pads for sitting and resting atop branches.
Question #19
A The theoretical perspective that the geologic processes observed today are the same as the processes operating in the past.
B The process of transforming the atom by spontaneously releasing energy.
C Core samples taken from lake beds or other water sources for analysis of their pollen
D The study of what happens to an organism after death
Question #20
A Core samples taken from lake beds or other water sources for analysis of their pollen
B Fossilized remains of activity such as footprints
C A relative dating method that is based on ordered layers that build up over time.
D Variants of elements that spontaneously change into stable isotopes over time.
Question #21
A Periods characterized by low global temperatures and the expansion of ice sheets on Earth’s surface.
B Matter that cannot be broken down into smaller matter.
C Mineralized copies of organisms or activity imprints.
D A specimen of human remains that is naturally mummified by extreme low temperatures.
Question #22
A A word used to describe species that are currently alive today.
B Mineralized copies of organisms or activity imprints.
C When a fossil is embedded in a substance, such as igneous rock.
D The smallest units of geologic time, spanning thousands to millions of years.
Question #23
A A relative dating method that analyzes the absorption of fluorine in bones from the surrounding soils.
B The scientific law that states that rock and soil are deposited in layers, with the youngest layers on top and the oldest layers on the bottom.
C The process by which the pressure of sediments squeeze extra water out of decaying remains and replace the voids that appear with minerals from the surrounding soil and groundwater.
D A chronometric dating method that uses the annual growth of trees to build a timeline into the past.
Question #24
A Mineralized copies of organisms or activity imprints
B Single-celled marine organisms with shells.
C Fossilized poop.
D A word used to describe species that are currently alive today.
Question #25
A Periods characterized by low global temperatures and the expansion of ice sheets on Earth’s surface.
B A word used to describe species that are currently alive today.
C The largest unity of geologic time, spanning billions of years and divided into subunits called eras, periods, and epochs.
D Mineralized copies of organisms or activity imprints.