Evolution
Connect concepts across Evolution with related topics. Focus on cross-chapter relationships and higher-order thinking.
Concept Core
The origin of life on Earth is explained by the chemical evolution theory, proposed independently by Oparin and Haldane, which states that life arose from simple inorganic molecules through a series of chemical reactions in a primordial reducing atmosphere. Stanley Miller and Harold Urey experimentally demonstrated this in 1953 by simulating early Earth conditions: a mixture of methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3), hydrogen (H2), and water vapour was subjected to electric sparks (simulating lightning) in a closed apparatus. After one week, amino acids (including glycine and alanine) and other simple organic molecules were found in the collected liquid, supporting abiogenic origin. Critically, the experiment used a reducing atmosphere with no free oxygen.
Multiple lines of evidence support biological evolution. Paleontological evidence from the fossil record shows transitional forms and increasing complexity over geological time. Comparative anatomy reveals homologous organs -- structures with the same embryonic origin but different functions, such as the forelimbs of a whale (swimming), bat (flying), horse (running), and human (grasping). Homologous organs indicate divergent evolution from a common ancestor. Analogous organs have different embryonic origins but similar functions, such as the wings of a bat (bone-supported, mammalian) and a butterfly (chitinous, insect), representing convergent evolution. Molecular evidence, including amino acid sequence comparisons of cytochrome c across species, provides quantitative measures of evolutionary relatedness.
Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection operates through four principles: variation exists within populations, these variations are heritable, organisms produce more offspring than can survive, and individuals with advantageous traits reproduce more successfully. Over generations, beneficial traits increase in frequency.
The Hardy-Weinberg principle provides a mathematical baseline for detecting evolution. In a population at equilibrium, allele frequencies remain constant across generations: p + q = 1 (allele frequencies) and + 2pq + = 1 (genotype frequencies), where p is the frequency of the dominant allele and q of the recessive allele. This equilibrium holds only when five conditions are met: no mutation, no migration (gene flow), no natural selection, large population size (no genetic drift), and random mating. Any departure from these conditions drives evolution.
Natural selection operates in three modes: stabilizing selection (favours intermediate phenotypes, reduces variation), directional selection (shifts the mean toward one extreme), and disruptive selection (favours both extremes, may lead to speciation).
Speciation occurs through two main pathways. Allopatric speciation results from geographical isolation that prevents gene flow, allowing populations to diverge over time. Sympatric speciation occurs within the same geographical area through reproductive isolation mechanisms. Adaptive radiation, exemplified by Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands and Australian marsupials, occurs when a single ancestral species diversifies into many forms occupying different ecological niches.
Human evolution progressed from Dryopithecus (ape-like, ~15 mya) through Ramapithecus (~14 mya), Australopithecus (~5 mya, first bipedal), Homo habilis (~2 mya, first tool-maker), Homo erectus (~1.5 mya, used fire), to Homo sapiens (~2 lakh years ago, modern humans with ~1400 cc brain volume). The key testable concept is distinguishing homologous organs (same origin, different function -- divergent evolution) from analogous organs (different origin, same function -- convergent evolution) and applying the Hardy-Weinberg equation with its five equilibrium conditions.
Key Testable Concept
Human evolution progressed from Dryopithecus (ape-like, ~15 mya) through Ramapithecus (~14 mya), Australopithecus (~5 mya, first bipedal), Homo habilis (~2 mya, first tool-maker), Homo erectus (~1.5 mya, used fire), to Homo sapiens (~2 lakh years ago, modern humans with ~1400 cc brain volume). The key testable concept is distinguishing homologous organs (same origin, different function -- divergent evolution) from analogous organs (different origin, same function -- convergent evolution) and applying the Hardy-Weinberg equation with its five equilibrium conditions.
Comparison Tables
A) Homologous vs Analogous Organs
| Feature | Homologous Organs | Analogous Organs |
|---|---|---|
| Embryonic origin | Same | Different |
| Function | Different | Similar |
| Structural plan | Similar (shared anatomy) | Different (no shared plan) |
| Type of evolution | Divergent evolution | Convergent evolution |
| Examples | Forelimbs of whale, bat, horse, human | Wings of bat (bone) and butterfly (chitin) |
| Additional examples | Thorn of Bougainvillea and tendril of Cucurbita (both stem modifications) | Eyes of octopus and mammals (independently evolved) |
| What they indicate | Common ancestry | Similar environmental pressures |
B) Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Conditions
| Condition | What It Means | Disrupted By |
|---|---|---|
| No mutation | No new alleles introduced into the gene pool | Mutations create new alleles, changing frequencies |
| No migration (gene flow) | No individuals enter or leave the population | Immigration introduces alleles; emigration removes them |
| No natural selection | All genotypes have equal fitness and survival | Differential survival and reproduction favour certain alleles |
| Large population size | Allele frequencies are not subject to random fluctuation | Genetic drift in small populations causes random changes (founder effect, bottleneck) |
| Random mating | Individuals choose mates without preference for genotype | Assortative mating or sexual selection alters genotype frequencies |
C) Human Evolution Timeline
| Species | Brain Volume (approx.) | Key Features | Tools/Abilities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dryopithecus | ~300-400 cc | Ape-like, arboreal, prognathous face | None known |
| Ramapithecus | ~300-400 cc | More erect than Dryopithecus, jaws and teeth human-like | None confirmed |
| Australopithecus | ~400-500 cc | First confirmed bipedal hominid, hunted with stones | Crude stone weapons |
| Homo habilis | ~600-700 cc | "Handy man," first tool-maker, omnivorous | Simple stone tools (Oldowan) |
| Homo erectus | ~800-1100 cc | Upright posture, used fire, migrated out of Africa | Acheulean hand axes, fire use |
| Homo sapiens (Neanderthalensis) | ~1400 cc | Stocky build, larger cranial capacity, cold-adapted | Sophisticated tools, buried dead |
| Homo sapiens sapiens | ~1300-1400 cc | Modern humans, art, language, agriculture | Advanced technology, agriculture |
Study Materials
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100 Flashcards
SM-2 spaced repetition flashcards with hints and explanations
100 Quiz Questions
Foundation and PYQ-style questions with AI feedback
20 Study Notes
Structured notes across 10 scientifically grounded formats
10 Summaries
Progressive summaries from comprehensive guides to cheat sheets
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about studying Evolution for NEET 2026.