Researchers have discovered the fossilized
skull of an early human relative, which they say is the most complete skull
ever of the early Homo genus, in Dmanisi, Georgia. They say it could represent
a single evolving Homo erectus lineage that came out of Africa and spread into
Europe and Asia -- a conclusion that is controversial.
Fragments of humans' ancient relatives are
scattered across the globe. Sometimes a tooth or a few bones are all we have to
tell us about an entire species closely related to humans that lived thousands
or millions of years ago.
So when anyone
finds a complete skull of a possible human ancestor, paleoanthropologists
rejoice. But with new knowledge comes new controversy over a fossil's place in
our species' very fuzzy family tree.
In the eastern
European nation of Georgia, a group of researchers has excavated a 1.8
million-year-old skull of an ancient human relative, whose only name right now
is Skull 5. They report their findings in the journal Science, and say it
belongs to our genus, called Homo.
"This is most
complete early Homo skull ever found in the world," said lead study author
David Lordkipanidze, researcher at the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi.
Skull 5 is the
fifth example of a hominid -- a bipedal primate mammal that walked upright --
from this time period found at the site in Dmanisi, Georgia. Stone tools and
animal bones have also been recovered from the area.
The variation in
physical features among the Dmanisi hominid specimens is comparable to the
degree of diversity found in humans today, suggesting that they all belong to
one species, Lordkipanidze said.
But "if you
will put separately all these five skulls and five jaws in different places,
maybe people will call it as a different species," he said.
Now it gets more
controversial: Lordkipanidze and colleagues also propose that these individuals
are members of a single evolving Homo erectus species, examples of which have
been found in Africa and Asia. The similarities between the new skull from
Georgia and Homo erectus remains from Java, Indonesia, for example, may mean
there was genetic "continuity across large geographic distances," the
study said.
What's more, the
researchers suggest that the fossil record of what have been considered
different Homo species from this time period -- such as Homo ergaster, Homo
rudolfensis and Homo habilis -- could actually be variations on a single
species, Homo erectus. That defies the current understanding of how early human
relatives should be classified.
Because of Skull 5
and the other Dmanisi fossils, scientists are "rethinking what happened in
Africa," Lordkipanidze said.
The Dmanisi
individuals appear to have long legs and short arms, based on the fossils that
have been found, said study co-author Marcia Ponce de Leon, of the
Anthropological Institute at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, at a press
conference.
The braincase of
Skull 5 is 546 cubic centimeters, which is smaller than expected.
The biggest brain
case found at Dmanisi is 75% larger than the smallest one, which is consistent
with what is observed in modern humans, said study co-author Christoph
Zollikofer of the Anthropological Institute in Zurich.
At Dmanisi,
researchers believe carnivores and hominids were fighting over animal
carcasses. The stone tools appear to have been used in butchering, based on the
cut marks on animal bones, Lordkipanidze said. They are comparable to tools
that have been found in Africa.
"It's a real
snapshot in time," Lordkipanidze said of the Dmanisi site.
Skull 5, excavated
in 2005, was matched to a jaw discovered in 2000. The first example of a
hominid fossil at Dmanisi was discovered in 1991.
So what species
came after Homo erectus in the history of human relatives? Scientists have no
idea, Zollikofer said.
"It would be
nice to say this is the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and us, but we
simply don't know," Zollikofer said.
The Dmanisi fossils
are a great find, say anthropology researchers not involved with the
excavation. But they're not sold on the idea that this is the same Homo erectus
from both Africa and Asia -- or that individual Homo species from this time
period are really all one species.
"The specimen
is wonderful and an important contribution to the hominin record in a temporal
period where there are woefully too few fossils," said Lee Berger,
paleoanthropologist at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, in
an e-mail.
But the suggestion
that these fossils prove an evolving lineage of Homo erectus in Asia and
Africa, Berger said, is "taking the available evidence too far."
Berger led the team
that discovered Australopithecus sediba, a possible human ancestor that lived
around 2 million years ago in South Africa. He criticized the authors of the
new study for not comparing the fossils at Dmanisi to A. sediba or to more
recent fossils found in East Africa.
Ancient fossils
question human family tree
Lordkipanidze said
he and colleagues consider A. sediba to be earlier and more primitive than the
Dmanisi hominids, and that there's "no doubt" the Georgian fossils
belong to the Homo genus.
But the selectivity
of fossils compared to them in this study may have artificially biased the results
toward the researchers' hypotheses, Berger said.
Ian Tattersall,
curator emeritus at the American Museum of Natural History's anthropology
division, said in an e-mail that there's "no way this extraordinarily
important specimen is Homo erectus," if the skull fragment discovered in
Trinil, Java, Indonesia, defines the features of the Homo erectus group.
The New York
museum's Hall of Human Origins takes visitors on a tour through human
evolutionary history, showing distinct Homo species reflected in major fossil
finds such as Turkana Boy (Homo ergaster) and Peking man (Homo erectus).
The Dmanisi
discovery may find a place there too, but it's probably not going to result in
relabeling other species, Tattersall said.
"Right now I
certainly wouldn't change the Hall -- except to add the specimen, which really
is significant," he said.
There is an area of
about 50,000 square meters at Dmanisi still to be excavated, so Skull 5 may
have even more company.
Ancient creature
had spider-like brain.
Source: Elizabeth Landau, CNN
1 comment:
Ibelieve in what the Bible says. Let us
make man in our own image and likeness.
I'm not in anyway convince about this
one
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