- Docente: Giorgio Gruppioni
- Credits: 6
- SSD: BIO/08
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Ravenna
-
Corso:
First cycle degree programme (L) in
Cultural Heritage (cod. 8849)
Also valid for First cycle degree programme (L) in Cultural Heritage (cod. 8849)
Learning outcomes
Through an analysis of human variability, the course provides knowledge and research methods concerning the biological and biocultural processes underlying the evolutionary history, dynamics and mechanisms of environmental adaptation of human populations. Particular attention is given to the biocultural diversity of human groups and to the conservation and appreciation of such diversity.
Course contents
The course is organized in an introductory part, in which the basic biological knowledge is recalled, followed by the study of phenomena and mechanisms that are at the origin of human biological variability and preside at the evolutionary processes and adaptation of man to the environment. The main topics are:
Introduction to physical anthropology: fundamental notions of general biology; development of evolutionary theories; genetic bases and environmental factors of biodiversity; history of anthropological studies; content, methods and applications of anthropology; role of physical anthropology in the field of cultural heritage.
Evolutionary history of man: the human body and its characterization in relation to non-human primates; the anatomic-functional transformations of the body at different stages of the pre-human and human evolution, in relation to climate and environmental changes; the conquest of bipedalism; the processes of cerebralization and anthropogenesis; the acquisition of articulated language; the appearance and spread of Homo sapiens.
The human variability: the inheritance of characters; genotype and phenotype; monogenic, polygenic and multifactorial inheritance; qualitative and quantitative characters; characters with continuous variation and discrete characters; polymorphism and polytypism; variability and factors of the pigmentary and tegumentary characters; morphology and morphometry of the human body; the anthropometric indexes and the fundamental somatometric characters; variability and factors of stature and body proportions; morphology and morphometry of the head and its elements. Human variability in relation to sex and life cycle: anthropological aspects of growth and ageing. Genetic polymorphisms and genetic variability of humans and human populations. The adaptive meaning of human variability: the genetic, physiological and cultural adaptation. The biological and ethnic diversity of human groups and relationships with living environments.
The anthropological reconstruction of the human populations of the past: the human remains of historical and archaeological interest; the types of human finds; the methods of recovery and treatment; the information obtained from their analysis; the main diagnostic criteria of sex, age of death, anthropological characters and diseases in human remains.
Readings/Bibliography
F. FACCHINI, Antropologia – Evoluzione, Uomo, Ambiente, UTET Libreria, Torino, II ed., 1995.
B. CHIARELLI, Dalla Natura alla Cultura - Principi di Antropologia biologica e culturale, Piccin, Padova, 2003-2004.
L. CAPASSO, Trattato di Antropologia, SEU ed., 2015
For the deepening of an interdisciplinary theme between Anthropology and Italian Studies: A. COTTIGNOLI, G. GRUPPIONI: Fabio Frassetto e l'enigma del volto di Dante. Longo Editore, 2012
Teaching methods
The course consists of frontal lectures related to the topics of the programme that can be supplemented by seminars on specific topics. Students will be encouraged to take an active part in the lessons through interventions, questions, requests for clarification and/or insights. During the course computer presentations will be projected, that will be distributed at the students at the end of the lessons. There are also demonstrations and exercises in the classroom on osteological materials.
Assessment methods
The assessment of student learning consists of an oral test, which can be sustained from the first useful scheduled exam after the end of the lessons, concerning the topics indicated in the course programme. At the begin of the exam, the student may propose to deal with a topic of choice, which will obviously follow the verification of the preparation on other topics of the program.
To pass the examination, the student will have to give evidence that he has acquired adequate knowledge, both general and systematic, on the various topics of the program and that he has seized the scientific and methodological instruments proper to the discipline. For the purpose of the final vote of the test will be evaluated:
- the degree of scientific and methodological deepening of the arguments covered;
- the ability to support a critical and reasoned close examination on the topics planned;
- the ability to carry out interdisciplinary connections;
- the language property and the exhibition quality.
Students not attending. The program of the course is the same for both students attending and not attending. The frequency of the lessons is strongly recommended for the achievement of a good profit, however, students who for valid reasons cannot attend the course are invited to consult the teacher, during the office hours, for the suggestion of the necessary supplementary texts.
Integrated course. The student who has included in his study plan the integrated course of "Physical anthropology and Paleoanthropology" of 12 CFU, consisting of the two modules of "Physical anthropology" and "Paleoanthropology", it will be able to support both separately the test of each of the two modules, starting from the first scheduled exam useful at the end of the respective lessons, or together, in the same exam, at the end of the entire didactic cycle. The verbalization of the examination will take place in any case after the passing of both modules and the overall vote shall be given by the average of the votes achieved in each of the two modules.
Teaching tools
Slide projection and PowerPoint presentations. Seminars on specific topics and case studies held by specialists. Demonstrations and exercises of osteology on human skeletal findings.
Office hours
See the website of Giorgio Gruppioni