Good evening, everyone. This is my first video introduction to human genetics. I will soon do the next session, but I want you all to check it out before the next video. Also, I made a mistake of comparing German Shepherd to police dog instead of the bulldog.
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Discussing about human genetics, I have talked about genetics as the study of heredity and variations. I talked about the physical differences such as colour, height, behaviour, and evolutionary origin. Buttressing evolutionary origin, I laid emphasis on Australopithecus afarensis.
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Australopithecus afarensis is an extinct hominin species from the continent of Africa. Afar means Africa, and Australopithecus means ape, and that is why it was given that name. The key discovery sites where its fossils have been found primarily include East Africa, especially Ethiopia (e.g., Hadar, site of "Lucy") and Tanzania (e.g., Laetoli, site of fossilized footprints), and Kenya. It is estimated to have lived between ~3.9 and 2.9 million years ago. It is one of the earliest known hominins to walk fully upright. This process of walking upright is called bipedalism.
Evolutionarily, all human—or, let me say, modern man—comes from A. afarensis, though it is just a potential ancestor to the genus Homo (which includes modern humans). To the next question that may run in your mind: Why Africa? Human evolution began in Africa, and A. afarensis is a critical part of that story. All confirmed fossils of this species come exclusively from African fossil beds.
For reference:
🌍 Continent: Africa
🦴 Key Fossils: "Lucy" (Ethiopia), Laetoli Footprints (Tanzania)
⏳ Era: Pliocene epoch
Thanks for this great opportunity to write on this platform
Thanks everyone.