"Evolution is a brutal trial" sculpture timelapse - part 9 - Finishing paint

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NEW SHOP ADDRESS: Newloot.Etsy.com Creating a sculpture where a man has dominated one smaller wolf and killed another, showing the brutality and effectiveness of human operated evolution. As a visual reference I use multiple historical text and studies and screenshots and videos from Far Cry: Primal, which is quite accurate how it presents 10 000 years B.C.
Hope you enjoy this figurine / figure!

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Wanna check out tutorials for sculpting figurines? Go to my channel and check out my Tutorials 1 and tutorial 2 playlists, they are full tutorials in real time!
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Human evolution is the evolutionary process that led to the emergence of anatomically modern humans. The topic typically starts by focussing on the evolutionary history of the primates—in particular the genus Homo, concluding with the emergence of Homo sapiens as a distinct species of the hominids (or great apes) rather than studying the earlier history that led to the primates. The study of human evolution involves many scientific disciplines, including physical anthropology, primatology, archaeology, paleontology, neurobiology, ethology, linguistics, evolutionary psychology, embryology and genetics.[1] Genetic studies show that primates diverged from other mammals about 85 million years ago, in the Late Cretaceous period, and the earliest fossils appear in the Paleocene, around 55 million years ago.[2] Within the Hominoidea (apes) superfamily, the Hominidae family diverged from the Hylobatidae (gibbon) family some 15–20 million years ago; African great apes (subfamily Homininae) diverged from orangutans (Ponginae) about 14 million years ago; the Hominini tribe (humans, Australopithecines and other extinct biped genera, and chimpanzees) parted from the Gorillini tribe (gorillas) between 9 million years ago and 8 million years ago; and, in turn, the subtribes Hominina (humans and biped ancestors) and Panina (chimps) separated about 7.5 million years ago to 5.6 million years ago.[3]

The origin of the domestic dog is not clear. The domestic dog is a member of genus Canis (canines) that forms part of the wolf-like canids, and is the most widely abundant carnivore.[1][2][3] The closest living relative of the dog is the gray wolf and there is no evidence of any other canine contributing to its genetic lineage.[1][2][4][5] The dog and the extant gray wolf form two sister clades,[5][6][7] with modern wolves not closely related to the wolves that were first domesticated.[6][7] The archaeological record shows the first undisputed dog remains buried beside humans 14,700 years ago,[8] with disputed remains occurring 36,000 years ago.[9] These dates imply that the earliest dogs arose in the time of human hunter-gatherers and not agriculturists.[2][6] The dog was the first domesticated species.[7][10][11][12]

Where the genetic divergence of dog and wolf took place remains controversial, with the most plausible proposals spanning Western Europe,[2][13] Central Asia,[13][14] and East Asia.[13][15] This has been made more complicated by the most recent proposal that fits the available evidence, which is that an initial wolf population split into East and West Eurasian groups; these, before going extinct, were domesticated independently into two distinct dog populations between 14,000–6,400 years ago. The Western Eurasian dog population was partially and gradually replaced by East Asian dogs introduced by humans at least 6,400 years ago.[13][16][17]

Six million years ago at the close of the Miocene era, the earth's climate was gradually cooling and this would lead to the glaciations of the Pliocene and the Pleistocene (the Ice Age). In many areas the forests and savannahs were being replaced with steppe or grasslands and only those creatures that could adapt would survive. On opposite sides of the planet, two very different lineages would adapt to these changes and their evolution would produce two species that would become the most widely distributed of mammals. In southern North America, small woodland foxes were growing bigger and becoming more adapted to running, and by the late Miocene the first of the genus Canis had arisen, the ancestors of coyotes, wolves and the domestic dog. In eastern Africa, a split was occurring among the large primates. Some would remain in the trees, while others would move out of the trees, learn to walk upright, develop enlarged brains, and learn to avoid predators while becoming a predator themselves in the more open country.




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