Fossil records provide biological anthropologists with information about species and how they lived in the past. Also, fossil records show how species evolved throughout time, and sometimes what caused the species to evolve. In the case of this article, it has a direct relationship to biological anthropology, and how biological anthropologists would go about studying early humans to understand how modern-day humans evolved to our traits. However, this article provides information that is not heavily supported by the fossil record. Support from the fossil record is another connection with biological anthropology. From understanding that there is not enough physical evidence (fossils), the next step for these scientists is to go out and refine their theory. They need to search and provide enough physical evidence that a biological anthropologist would need to support their findings to receive scientific
Fossil records provide biological anthropologists with information about species and how they lived in the past. Also, fossil records show how species evolved throughout time, and sometimes what caused the species to evolve. In the case of this article, it has a direct relationship to biological anthropology, and how biological anthropologists would go about studying early humans to understand how modern-day humans evolved to our traits. However, this article provides information that is not heavily supported by the fossil record. Support from the fossil record is another connection with biological anthropology. From understanding that there is not enough physical evidence (fossils), the next step for these scientists is to go out and refine their theory. They need to search and provide enough physical evidence that a biological anthropologist would need to support their findings to receive scientific