Glossary
habitat
the natural place or environment in which a species or organism lives.
habitual bipedalsim
when an animal assumes a form of bipedalism on a permanent basis due to habit or anatomy.
hallux
the big, or first, toe.
hamate
the last carpal on the distal row; wedge-shaped.
haplorhine
in taxonomic classification, members of the suborder Haplorhini, including tarsiers, monkeys, apes and humans.
Harris lines
transverse lines that form at the ends of long bones in the body that develop as a result of intense nutritional stress during growth; similar to hypoplasia on the teeth.
herbivore
a dietary category that describes animals that specialize in eating primarily plant material, such as grass.
heredity
the process of transmitting genetic material from parent to offspring.
heterozygote
when an organism has two or more different alleles at a particular locus in a chromosome.
holophyletic group
in cladistics, a clade (i.e., group) that consists of a single common ancestor and all its descendants. Holophyletic of often preferred to its synonym monophyletic.
home range
an area of permanent occupation by an individual or group of individuals. Males and females of the same species may have overlapping home ranges, but members of the same sex of a species will never have overlapping home ranges.
hominid
a term most commonly used to describe humans and our bipedal fossil relatives to the exclusion of the other large apes. In a formal sense, hominid reflects a classification that groups humans and their bipedal fossil relatives in the family Hominoidea to the exclusion of the apes who are placed in the families Hylobatidae (gibbon, siamangs) and Pongidae (orangutan, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla).
hominin
a term most commonly used to describe the group that includes humans and our bipedal fossil relatives. In a formal sense, hominin reflects a new classification based on the close genetic relationship among humans and chimpanzees that places them in the subfamily Hominine and separates the humans and their close fossil relatives into a separate tribe. Under this scheme, humans and their close relatives are hominins.
hominoid
a term most commonly used to informally describe the apes (gibbon, siamang, orangutan, chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla). In a formal sense, hominoid reflects a classification that places the large apes in the family Pongidae, the small apes in the family Hylobatidae, humans and their bipedal fossil relatives in the family Hominidae, and groups all of these in the superfamily Hominoidea. Under this scheme, all of these species are hominoids but the term is usually restricted to the apes only.
homology
[adj. homologous] characters shared as a result of common ancestry.
homoplasy
characters that are similar but not the result of common ancestry; may be a result of convergent evolution and/or parallel evolution.
homozygote
when an organism has two or more of the same alleles at a particular locus in a chromosome.
humerus
upper arm bone.
hypocone
the distal cusp located on the lingual side of the upper molar.
hypoconid
the distal cusp located on the buccal side of the lower molar.
hypothesis
an assumption or guess, based upon observation, that may be supported or disproved through the scientific method.