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Key Terms


bipedal anatomy  a set of anatomical adaptations that make it possible for an animal to use two legs for locomotion
bipedality  use of two legs rather than four for locomotion
hominid  member of the family Hominidae
hominine  member of the subfamily Homininae, which includes the African apes and humans
Piltdown Man  fossil find considered an important link in human evolution until it was shown to be a fake in 1953
Pliocene  epoch that occurred between 5.0 and 1.8 mya
Plio-Pleistocene  boundary between the Pliocene and Pleistocene epochs, about 1.8 mya
pongid  member of the family Pongidae (not used by the author of this book)
prognathism  condition in which the jaw projects beyond the upper parts of the face
sectorial premolar  lower premolar that exhibits lateral (side-to-side) compression due to its role as a shearing surface for the upper canine tooth
shearing complex  condition in which the lower first premolar is somewhat sharpened or flattened from rubbing against the upper canine as the mouth closes
tribe  taxonomic classification placed below subfamily and above genus







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