This is a very good question. In fact I think it is one of the most important questions we might ask.
Of course nobody on the planet can answer it because we simply do not know. A whole field of science, called paleoanthropology, has set out to do so for the past 150 years since Darwin's "Origin of Species".
The following is only my opnion. I am no authority (not that this should really impress anyone too much if I was) but I have been studying the subject for ten years. I have a master's degree from UCL (London) with a distinction and have completed almost 6 years of a PhD at UWA (Perth, Australia).
The orthodox view of human evolution held by anthropological authorities is still very much that a shift in climate towards greater aridity is the major thing that made us human. The old 'Savannah theory' which claimed that as Africa got drier, the trees shrank back and our ancestors were forced out onto the open plains, is still pretty much the paradigm that students all over the world are taught. It is true that the idea has been somewhat discredited since Kaye Reed's paper showed that Savannah, as we know it, is a relatively recent phenomenon - too late to have driven much of ape-human divergence and it is true that a significant minority of anthropologists have never really believed the 'Savannah theory' - but it is still pretty much the main idea we have.
A small minority of interested people, however, including myself, have the view the a shift to more open habitats does not explain the differences between humans and apes. If you go for the "full on" Savannah theory it begs the question why are no other Savannah mammals bipedal, large brained, small-toothed, fat, naked and able to use some form of language. If you go for the much more modest, "it was a shift to slightly more open woodland" it begs the question "isn't this the sort of place most chimps live today?"
A far better set of explanations for the characteristics of ape-human divergence can be found amongst ideas which I label "waterside hypotheses of human evolution". Basically they posit that selection from moving (i.e. wading, swimming and diving) through water affected our phenotype more than the great apes' since the last common ancestor.
We're bipedal because wading upright in fast flowing shallow water during a flood could save your life. We're naked because it reduces drag in water whilst swimming. We're fat because it aids buoyancy and thermoregulation in water. We've got large brains because of a switch in diet to shellfish and fish - high in energy and rich in nutirents necessary for brain growth. We've had dental reduction because eating such foods do not require large teeth. We became tool users because there are many pebbles on the beach and lots of shellfish to eat if you use them in a minimal way. We speak because breath control is essential for swimming and diving and it happens to be a pre-requisite for speech which we have and apes lack.
I could go on but instead I suggest you read any of Elaine Morgan's books on the subject. The later ones (e.g. "The Naked Darwinist" and "The aquatic ape hypothesis") are the best.
Yes, genetic drift has played a role in shaping the diversity and evolution of humans. It has influenced the genetic variation within different human populations over time. In small or isolated populations, genetic drift can have a larger impact on diversity due to random changes in allele frequencies.
Early man scholars rejected fossils as a means to trace human evolution because they held religious or cultural beliefs that contradicted the idea of human evolution. Additionally, fossils were not well understood or widely accepted as evidence of human ancestry at the time.
It isn't
Human evolution is no different from the evolution of any other species of plant or animal. Over the course of hundreds of thousands of years our ancestors survived by being the better competitor for resources in their environment in their gene pool. The genes that enabled this better survivability were passed on, until the majority of the population were adapted to their environment etc:. homo habilis or homo sapiens or primates
The term for human fossil remains is "paleoanthropology." Studying these fossils can provide insights into human evolution by helping researchers understand the physical characteristics and behavioral adaptations of early hominins and how they have changed over time. This information helps reconstruct the evolutionary history of humans.
Climate changes that caused existing primates to search for new food sources
Museum of Human Evolution was created in 2010.
Biological anthropology is the branch of science that studies human evolution.
The 'Human' Factor was created in 1975.
Yes, genetic drift has played a role in shaping the diversity and evolution of humans. It has influenced the genetic variation within different human populations over time. In small or isolated populations, genetic drift can have a larger impact on diversity due to random changes in allele frequencies.
Daniel Lieberman has written: 'The evolution of the human head' -- subject(s): Head, Growth, Evolution, Human evolution, Biological Evolution, Growth & development
Paleoanthropology is the term that refers to the study of human fossil remains and how they relate to human evolution. This field combines aspects of anthropology and paleontology to understand the biological and behavioral evolution of the human species.
A chart showing human evolution with only males would not be representative because it neglects the important roles females played in human evolution. Both males and females contributed to the evolutionary process through reproduction, caregiving, and other behaviors. Excluding females from such a chart overlooks their significant contributions and distorts the full picture of human evolutionary history.
Laziness isn't just related to human evolution: laziness is a driving factor in all evolution. All life evolves to gain the most by expending the littlest, often by evolving complex behavioural strategies. Variants that expend more to gain less are simply outcompeted by 'lazier' variants. So the life you see is inevitably the laziest possible life.
In the past century there will be a different classification of human evolution
No, human evolution followe a path with many branches.
The evolution of humans is the concept that humans evolved from the same ancestors as apes and monkeys. Human evolution is the part of biological evolution concerning the emergence of humans as a distinct species. It is the subject of a broad science that seeks to understand and describe how this change and development occurred. The study of human evolution encompasses many scientific disciplines, most notably biological-anthropology, linguistics and genetics. The term "human", in the context of human evolution, refers to the genus homo, but studies of human evolution usually include other hominini, such as the australopithecine.