• We have updated the guidelines regarding posting political content: please see the stickied thread on Website Issues.

Our Earliest Ancestor

Mighty_Emperor

Gone But Not Forgotten
(ACCOUNT RETIRED)
Joined
Aug 18, 2002
Messages
19,407
Or more stritly someone just after our Last Common Ancestor with chimps and/or gorillas:

Early Human Ancestor Had Small Teeth

Thu 4 March, 2004 19:02

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A 6 million-year-old creature that lacked sharp canines for fighting may be the first pre-human to have branched off from the ape line, researchers said on Thursday.

The short, small-brained creature may provide a good hint of what the common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans looked like, the researchers said.

Fossil remains of the early hominid were found in Ethiopia three years ago, and it seemed to be a subspecies of a known pre-human, Ardipithecus ramidus.

But the scientists have found more teeth from a group of the hominid, re-classified it as a distinct species and named it Ardipithecus kadabba.

"Ardipithecus kadabba may also represent the first species on the human branch of the family tree just after the evolutionary split between lines leading to modern chimpanzees and humans," said Yohannes Haile-Selassie, curator and head of physical anthropology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History in Ohio, who led the study.

His team's report, published in Friday's issue of the journal Science, suggests that the last common ancestor of chimps and humans had long canines used to fight -- something chimps have today, but not humans.

The researchers dug up fossils from at least five individuals who once lived in a wooded environment, now a dry, rocky area in the Afar rift of Ethiopia's Middle Awash region -- a rich source of pre-human remains.

They had enough to determine that it was an upright-standing hominid about the size of a chimpanzee that lived between 5.2 and 5.8 million years ago.

Six new teeth were found at the site in 2002 and included an upper canine, premolars from both jaws, and upper molars.

"We see a lot of primitiveness in the teeth," Haile-Selaisse said in a telephone interview.

One key characteristic is a self-sharpening function.

"The canine tooth comes across the outside face of the lower premolar and it sharpens that way," said Tim White of the University of California Berkeley, who worked on the report.

"It is like honing a knife on a stone. Almost all of the monkeys and all of the apes, they have all very long and projecting canines (with this mechanism)."

In modern apes these sharp teeth are used by males for fighting, or to frighten off an aggressor. The theory is that hominids evolved more peaceable behavior, said White, with females choosing males who could stand upright and help raise young over males who were busy fighting and showing off.

Fossil remains of similar creatures found in Chad and Kenya are similar enough to suggest they are closely related -- even in the same genus as Ardipithecus, the researchers said.

"We now have an assemblage or set of early canines and none of them are big and slashing," White said.

"What this indicates is that earliest hominids had these small canines that were in the same animal as a small brain -- we know that from skull in Chad -- and that head was attached to a bipedal body."

One of the most famous pre-humans, "Lucy" or Australopithecus afarensis, dates back 3 million years. "This doubles the time period all the way back to 6 million years that a small-brained, small-canine bipedal early hominid existed," White said.

Genetics tells scientists that chimpanzees and hominids diverged from a common ancestor around 7 million years ago. "But genetics can't tell us what this animal was like," White said.

It is also becoming clear that looking at chimpanzees, who evolved as much as humans did if not more over this period, do not provide a good model of the ancestor, either.

http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=scienceNews&storyID=4500294&section=news
 
Another Branch of Human Ancestors Reported

By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD

Published: March 5, 2004



Another species has been added to the family tree of early human ancestors — and to controversies over how straight or tangled were the branches of that tree.

Long before Homo erectus, Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy, more than three million years ago) and several other distant kin, scientists are reporting today, there lived a primitive hominid species in what is now Ethiopia about 5.5 million to 5.8 million years ago.

That would make the newly recognizied species one of the earliest known human ancestors, perhaps one of the first to emerge after the chimpanzee and human lineages diverged from a common ancestor some six million to eight million years ago.

The timing of the fateful split has been determined by molecular biological research, and in recent years fossil hunters have found traces of what those earliest hominids, human ancestors and their close relatives, might have been like.

When the first fossil bones and teeth of this hominid were described three years ago, paleoanthropologists tentatively identified it as a more apelike subspecies that they named Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba. The original ramidus species was found in 1994 in 4.4-million-year-old sediments, also in Ethiopia.

But with more discoveries and a closer study, especially of the teeth, the scientists decided that the kadabba fossils from five individuals were distinctive enough to qualify as a separate species, Ardipithecus kadabba. In that case, the scientists added, kadabba was not a subspecies, but the likely direct ancestor of ramidus. But there were too few skeletal bones yet to learn much about other aspects of kadabba.

The description and interpretation of the new hominid species appear today in the journal Science. The authors of the report are Dr. Yohannes Haile-Selassie of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Dr. Gen Suwa of the University of Tokyo and Dr. Tim D. White of the University of California, Berkeley.

The kadabba fossils were found in the Middle Awash valley about 180 miles northeast of Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital. These are arid badlands now, but in the time of the early hominids the land was wooded and more hospitable.

Dr. Haile-Selassie said the shapes and wear patterns of six teeth in particular were "significant in understanding how the dentition evolved from an apelike common ancestor into the earliest hominids." They were also critical, he said, in differentiating the earlier and later species of the genus Ardipithecus.

Other scientists familiar with the research, but not involved in it, said they agreed or were at least inclined to agree with the authors' designation of a separate species for the fossils. But they were not so sure about the authors' proposal that the fossils were so similar to those of two other recently discovered early species that all three species might have actually belonged to a single genus of closely related hominids.

The other two hominid species are Sahelanthropus tchadensis, found in Chad and thought to be six million to seven million years old, and Orrorin tugenensis, a six-million-year-old specimen from Kenya. The two are primitive apelike creatures not much bigger than a modern chimp. Although the analysis of these remains is not complete, and still subject to debate, each has been classified as a separate genus and species.

In their report on kadabba, Dr. Haile-Selassie and his colleagues concluded, "Given the limited data currently available, it is possible that all of these remains represent specific or subspecific variation within a single genus."

Dr. White, one of the most experienced paleoanthropologists, emphasized this point in a telephone interview. "These earliest hominids are all very, very similar," he said. "When you look at these three snapshots we have, we are struck by the great biological similarity, not by pronounced differences, not by great lineage diversity."

But in an accompanying commentary in the journal, Dr. David R. Begun, a paleontologist at the University of Toronto, questioned this interpretation. He said it was unlikely that all three of the early hominids belonged to a single genus, noting instead that the three exhibited evidence of striking diversity.

Dr. Begun conceded that "the level of uncertainty in the available direct evidence at this time renders irreconcilable differences of opinion inevitable."

The differences, broadly speaking, take the form of two images of what the hominid family tree looks like — a ladder or a bush. A growing number of scientists, finding multiple species of hominids that overlapped in time, contend that in response to new or changed circumstances hominids evolved along many diverse lines — a bush with many branches.

Dr. Begun, in a telephone interview, emphasized that he was not disagreeing with the designation of the new species, but was "merely presenting an alternative" to the single-genus interpretation.

"The material is so fragmentary," he said, "that we really can't know, and so our differences often are a reflection of different philosophies and experience in research."

Dr. Alan Walker, an anatomist at Pennsylvania State University who specializes in hominid research but was not involved in the kadabba analysis, said that too few fossils had been discovered to justify either interpretation. He noted that it was easy to be misled by variations that are normal within the fossil collections of any single species.

"People who believe in a bushy family tree will look for bushiness in their fossils, and those who don't won't," Dr. Walker said in an interview. "We are generalizing far too much, with not very many fossils spread over a long period of time."

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/05/science/05HUMA.html

Archaeologists in Ethiopia Hope for Older 'Lucy'

Wed 3 March, 2004 17:15

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Archaeologists studying human origins in eastern Ethiopia said on Wednesday a wealth of new finds meant they could hope to discover even older and more complete specimens than the famous fossil "Lucy."

The scientists excavating fossils in Ethiopia's eastern region of Somali for the last two years said they had unearthed 1,000 specimens of archaeological finds which included stone tools, fauna remains and elephant tusks.

Also uncovered were 400 fauna and primate remains in Galile, a village 215 miles east of the capital Addis Ababa.

"Our goals for the future are to find more complete hominid specimens probably from an older time frame than that of Lucy," Gerhard Weber, professor of Anthropology at University of Vienna, Austria, said in a statement.

Lucy is Ethiopia's world-acclaimed archaeological find, dug up in 1974 in an almost complete hominid skeleton estimated at least 3.2 million years old. Hominids are the family of primates of which humans, homo sapiens, are the only surviving species.

"Galile is an important opportunity in Ethiopia as well as within the East African Rift to study human origin," Weber said.

Weber heads the international team composed of researchers from the United States, Germany and Ethiopia.

He described Galile as an area with high potential to find hominid remains in a more complete and preserved status.

"These discoveries make the knowledge of human evolution to be better understood," Hasen Said, an Ethiopian archaeologist and associate member of the international team said.

Three hominid teeth, one believed to be nearly four million years old, were also discovered in Galile, the scientists said.

Lucy's remain were found in Hadar in the Afar regional state, where 20 years later scientists dug up the remains of a chimpanzee-sized ape, estimated at 4.4 million years old about 47 miles east of Hadar.

Last year, remains of a 160,000 year-old hominid were also discovered by Ethiopian and American scientists at Herto village in Afar region, about 140 miles northeast of Addis Ababa.

Source
 
If they want to know what pre-humans looked like, why don't they just come and take a good hard look at my boys?

Although we suspect the younger one may actually be some kind of mineral-based life-form......
 
I kind of thought most children where mucus-based lifeforms but I'm sure they vary ;)

March 25, 2004, 12:09AM

How humans evolved from apes may be jaw-dropper

Genetic mutation led to larger brains, study argues

By RICK WEISS
Washington Post

The evolutionary split between early humans and apes may have begun with a tiny mutation in a gene for jaw muscles -- a lucky break that allowed the skull to grow and make room for the enormous brain that would eventually become the hallmark of Homo sapiens.

That's the controversial conclusion of researchers from the University of Pennsylvania, whose discovery of the mutation, announced Wednesday, has reignited the long smoldering debate over how modern humans evolved.

The Penn team's work suggests that early primate skulls -- much like the skulls of modern gorillas and chimpanzees -- were literally muscle-bound by powerful jaw muscles and cramped by the big bony spurs that anchored them.

Only when a quirk of nature produced mutants with radically smaller jaw muscles was the skull free at last to expand from one generation to the next.

The rest, as the team says, is human history.

"The going joke around the lab is that this is the `rft' mutation -- the `room-for-thought' mutation," said Hansell Stedman, who led the new work.

The Penn hypothesis quickly prompted an extraordinary range of expert commentary, from ecstatic to downright scornful.

But supporters and critics of the Penn proposal agreed that it was an important scientific first to have found a genetic mutation that apparently occurred just when significant physical changes were occurring in pre-humans, as documented by a number of fossil finds.

"I have to imagine there's going to be a good number of genetic discoveries like this," said Sean Carroll, an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. "Even if this mutation doesn't end up accounting for as many things as are now being tossed up there on the blackboard, the work heralds a new era in which genetic studies will help scientists fill vexing gaps in the story of human evolution," he said.

The path to the latest discovery began when Stedman went searching for genes that might be implicated in human muscle diseases. While scanning the database of the entire human genome he happened upon a previously unrecognized muscle gene.

The so-called MYH16 gene builds major components of two jaw muscles -- the masseter and the temporalis -- that are prominent in every nonhuman primate species alive today.

The gene had gone unnoticed because in humans, the Penn team found, it is disabled by a tiny mutation -- accounting for those muscles' much reduced size.

By tallying the mutations that have occurred in the human version of the gene, and knowing the rate at which such mutations accumulate, the Penn team calculated that the gene was first disabled about 2.4 million years ago -- just before the skulls of early humans began their stunning increase in size, launching the meteoric ascendance of the human species.

"We're suggesting that possibly this mutation initiated an evolutionary cascade," said Penn team member Nancy Minugh-Purvis. Free from the big temporalis and masseter muscles, which wrapped around the head and held the otherwise expandable skull bones together, early humans could accommodate other genetic changes that increased brain size, she suggested.

And the big bony anchors for those muscles, now obsolete, disappeared over time, she said, also allowing for an increase in brain case capacity.

Life would not have been easy for the first primates affected by the jaw-weakening mutation, as they scrambled for survival with punier jaws than their rivals.

But contemporaneous events in human evolution may have helped these first mutants get by. It was about 2.5 million years ago that pre-humans began to use stone tools -- an innovation that allowed food to be ground and chopped, reducing reliance on big jaw muscles for grinding and tearing.

Several experts said that for now, at least, they're unconvinced by the Penn data.

"This idea that until you had small chewing muscles you couldn't have big brains, I just don't buy it," said Daniel Lieberman, a Harvard biological anthropologist, adding that he cannot say it is wrong, but he wants more evidence.

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/2466607

Interesting diagram too.

Emps
 
Little Hominid May Have Been Failed Experiment
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A tiny pre-human who lived more than 900,000 years ago in what is now Kenya may have been a "short experiment" in evolution that never quite made it, scientists said on Thursday.

The little skull clearly belongs to an adult and was found last summer at a site where much larger hominids classified as Homo erectus lived, said Richard Potts of the Smithsonian Institution and colleagues.

He or she died on a volcanic ridge, perhaps mauled by a lion or other carnivore, Potts said.

It is the smallest adult fossil found dating back to the time of Homo erectus, the species of pre-human that dominated between 500,000 and 1.7 million years ago, Potts' team writes in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

Potts believes the fossil find shows that early humans lived in little groups that became separate and distinct for a while, and then came together every few thousand years or so, swapping genes and then parting ways again.

"On occasion, they became isolated for a while, possibly hundreds of generations, and so developed their own unique combination of features," Potts said in an e-mail.

But dramatic climate and environmental changes known to have occurred during those times forced groups to move together again, and perhaps drove some into extinction.

Perhaps there were lots of "short experiments" -- species that never really quite made it, Potts said.

"In this light, I would see the hominid population at Olorgesailie as part of a single, highly variable species, with both large and small (possibly male/female) adults."

VIOLENT DEATH

This particular early human was found in an area that would have been a volcanic ridge 900,000 years ago. Potts' team is working, as anthropologists often do, from fragments of skull -- and guessing what the rest of the creature looked like.

It had carnivore bite marks on the left brow ridge, Potts said. "Quite possibly this is how the individual died. It was walking along or near the volcanic ridge leading up to the highlands (a safer nighttime place to be than by the water's edge in the lowland) and it didn't quite make it."

Remains of large tools have been found in the area, where Potts and colleagues have worked for years.

"The entire area was a grassy plain, filled with grazing zebra and very large grass-eating baboons, along with grazing elephants and huge pigs," Potts said.

"The toolmakers made extensive use of the volcanic rocks up on Mount Olorgesailie and surrounding highlands -- we've identified 14 different types of volcanic rocks that they chipped into handaxes."

Homo erectus remains have been found in parts of Africa, southern Europe and Asia. These hominids made tools and lived in groups, but anthropologists are trying to figure out whether there were separate species or sub-species among the group.

This particular individual will be difficult to classify, Potts said.

"It's really too hard to say what species it is, if you happen to think there were multiple species around at the time. I certainly used to think so," he said.

He has compared the skulls of fossils found from other hominids that lived around the same time, including Homo antecessor from Atapuerca in Spain or Homo cepranensis, from Ceprano, Italy.

"I find the variability in the skulls (and parts of skulls) impossible to divide neatly into separate lineages that stay consistently identifiable over any length of time, like Homo erectus in Asia does," Potts said.

http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=scienceNews&storyID=5568062&section=news
 
Wow thats a very impressive find - while the variability was high around then (its the period when archaic Homo sapiens/Homo heidelbergensis emerged) this is seemingly beyond that kind of envelope. We might be seeing the radiation of different groups at the end of Homo erectus' 1 million year long existence which, when pruned down again, resulted in the lineage which lead to us (and potentially the one that lead to the Neadnerthals).

Emps
 
Another report on the pre-human who lived more than 900,000 years ago.

Skull fuels Homo erectus debate

By Julianna Kettlewell
BBC News Online science staff

The fossilised skull of a hominid that lived 930,000 years ago has been found in Kenya, Science magazine reports.


The creature may have belonged to the species Homo erectus, says the team which found it, even though its skull is smaller than previously seen.

But the fossil has fuelled a debate over how we group these ancient humans.

One camp claims H. erectus came in many shapes and sizes, while the other says it contains several species - which are incorrectly lumped together.

Both camps think the new find supports their argument. The diminutive skull could either demonstrate how variable H. erectus was - or it could belong to an entirely different species, forcing scientists to rethink hominid classification.

Heated debate

H. erectus lived between about two million and 400,000 years ago. According to one view, it evolved in Africa, but gradually migrated through the Old World.

The first fossil specimen was identified by Eugène Dubois during the late 19th Century, in Java, Indonesia. Since then a collection of remains and artefacts have been found but, especially in Africa, the fossil record is pretty patchy.

This has prevented scientists from gaining a clear picture of how much physical variation is "normal" for the species.
Most of the fossils uncovered have displayed a degree of uniqueness. But it is hard to know whether H. erectus was highly variable, or whether several different species were in fact present.

At the moment nearly every hominid find is placed under the "umbrella" of H erectus, but many researchers are unhappy about it.

"Palaeoanthropologists often have this assumption that every hominid found from that time period is a H. erectus," said Jeffery Schwartz, of the University of Pittsburgh, US. "They group hominids not on the basis of what they look like, but the time when they lived, which is totally unfounded.

"There is a tradition of confusing diversity with variation."

Different species?

The new fossil, uncovered by a team led by Richard Potts, of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC, US, is, once again, unique.

Although adult, it is much smaller than most other specimens and, according to Professor Schwartz, its skull is unlike the original "Java man" H. erectus.

"In the Java specimen the forehead is very long and backwardly sloping and it has very thin projecting brow ridges," he told BBC News Online. "But in Potts' specimen the angle of the forehead is different and the shape of the brow ridges is different."

But is it a different species? Professor Schwartz thinks so, but plenty of others do not.

"It is probably the cranium of a teenage female H. erectus," said Tim White of the University of Berkeley, California, US. "Many species exhibit sexual dimorphism. Gorilla males have a big crest on the top of their heads, but the females never do.

"Did H. erectus have sexual dimorphism? We don't know. But if there is no evidence of another lineage, why create one?"

There is other evidence too, which might support the "one variable species" theory.

Found near Professor Potts' fossil were hand-axes, typical of those associated with H. erectus. Not only that, but the hand-axes are quite big, suggesting they were made by larger individuals.

This has led Professor Potts to speculate that "his" hominid was part of a single population containing both large and small individuals.

And that could suggest broad physical variation existed happily within one species.

"By virtue of being small it extends our understanding of the variation of physical features available at that time," said Professor Potts.

Hard work

Professor White and Professor Schwartz are very clear on where they stand in the dispute. So what does Professor Potts think?

He is distancing himself from the whole argument. Although he says the individual shared many characteristics with H. erectus, he avoids calling it one.

"We are not going to name this hominid, because we can't be sure," he said. "To my mind it is very difficult to say, just from the bones, where the species boundaries lie.

"This debate generates a lot of heat but not a lot of light. What we are trying to do is reconstruct a very intricate and important process of how our own species arose."

In Professor Potts' opinion, the only way to end the disagreement is to build up the fossil record.

If scientists have a large fossil data-base, they will see patterns of similarities and differences. And then the species boundaries should become clear.

He said: "We just have to undergo the hard work of going out to these field sites, and being really patient and accumulating enough fossils to answer these questions."


BBCi News 02/07/04
 
Local man studies when we first walked the walk



By Jennifer Bails
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Wednesday, September 15, 2004


By using computer technology to analyze the fossil remains of the earliest known human-like creature, a Pittsburgh mechanical engineer has added fuel to the scientific debate about when humans started walking on two legs.

In 2000, a pair of French paleontologists unearthed remains from deep in the heart of Africa's Great Rift Valley in the Tugen Hills of Kenya.

The fossil bones of this so-called Millennium Man -- known in anthropological circles as Orrorin tugenesis -- are thought to be about 6 million years old. Until they were found, the oldest human-like fossils discovered were dated at 4.5 million years old.

A well-preserved femur (thigh bone) from Orrorin suggests this chimpanzee-sized creature had strong back legs and possibly walked upright.

Karol Galik, a mechanical engineer at Allegheny General Hospital's Orthopedic Biomechanics Laboratory on the North Side, has found strong evidence to support this theory by analyzing X-ray scans of cross-sections of the fossil bone.

"We started the project two years ago, and I had some experience with medical imaging and bones from my Ph.D. work," Galik said. "I looked around for software to make it easier."

Galik's findings, published Sept. 3 in the journal Science, suggest that Millennium Man is indeed the earliest known hominid to be bipedal -- to walk on two legs. Hominids include humans and extinct near-humans.

A native of Slovakia, Galik, 37, was part of a team of researchers led by his father-in-law, Robert Eckhardt, a Penn State evolutionary biologist who has studied human evolution for more than 30 years.

"Bipedalism is the signature characteristic that defines humans as separate from other hominid primates," Eckhardt said.

British naturalist Charles Darwin theorized that walking on two legs freed the arms and hands so early hominids could make and use tools. Some scientists argue instead that bipedalism made it possible for male hominids to carry food so the females could focus on child rearing and thereby increase the survival rate of their offspring, Eckhardt said.

Regardless of why bipedalism evolved, most experts had believed it appeared about 4 million years ago. Galik's findings push this date back by 2 million years.

This means that the ancestors of chimpanzees and humans likely went their separate ways on the evolutionary tree about 2 million years earlier than thought, Eckhardt said.

Galik moved to the United States about 10 years ago and completed his doctorate in mechanical engineering at the University of Pittsburgh, where he studied ankle joint mechanics.

At AGH, the Mt. Lebanon resident is working with orthopedic surgeons to develop a new prosthesis to treat arm bone injuries.

Eckhardt tapped his son-in-law's expertise in medical imaging technology to analyze CT scans of the interior of Orrorin's thigh bone.

"If you have children, you have to get them married to the right people to further your career," Eckhardt joked.

CT scans, or computed tomography, use a rotating X-ray device to create detailed cross-sectional images of body parts.

Galik used specialized software to create three-dimensional models of the femur from CT scans taken of the fossil shortly after it was found.

In today's apes, the thickness in the upper and lower parts of the thigh bone is roughly the same. In modern humans, the bone is about four times thinner on the top than on the bottom. By taking sophisticated measurements of his 3-D models, Galik found the ratio in the fossil to be one to three, suggesting a transition toward upright posture and bipedalism, he said.

"The story is not the find, but the finding," Eckhardt said. "The fossils were already found, but we've used really powerful modern imaging technology to show something that otherwise wouldn't have been visible."

To build consensus among anthropologists that Millennium Man was a biped, it will be necessary to improve the resolution of the CT scans, which were taken several years ago, Galik said.

"The CT scans are not of good quality, and the resolution was low," he said. "If they had zoomed in, we could have had better resolution -- but they didn't."

Eckhardt is applying for a grant from the National Science Foundation to go to Kenya to remove the fossils from the museum vault where they are being stored and have them scanned again. Paleontologists also continue to comb the fossil-rich African Rift Valley for more remains from the dawn of human time, he said.

Even if Orrorin walked on two legs, some scientists in the field remain skeptical that it's a human ancestor.

University of Pittsburgh anthropologist Jeffrey Schwartz agreed that Galik's findings show Orrorin was bipedal for at least some part of its life. But key structural differences between the fossil bone and modern human femurs make it unlikely that we descended from Millennium Man, Schwartz said.

Instead, Orrorin could have been a forerunner of apes or an evolutionary dead end.

"Whoever owned this femur may have supported itself on two legs at least part of the time," Schwartz said. "But I don't think these things can be ancestors of humans. To me, that makes it even more interesting."

http://pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/trib/regional/s_251344.html

Some very interesting results - around about the time of our LCA with the chimps and gorillas there appears to have been a very early appearance of bipedalism and that there may have been quite a lot of divergence in the old family tree which seems to show that some of the lineages that didn't lead to us may also have been bidepal.
 
This is a fascinating find helping define that tricky window period where the LCA of the great apes lived - it is also interesting that they have realy danced around saying that this actually took place in Eurasia rather than Africa (they may be right of course) and avoide words like "missing link":

'Original' great ape discovered

By Paul Rincon
BBC News science reporter

Scientists have unearthed remains of a primate that could have been ancestral not only to humans but to all great apes, including chimps and gorillas.

The partial skeleton of this 13-million-year-old "missing link" was found by palaeontologists working at a dig site near Barcelona in Spain.

Details of the sensational discovery appear in Science magazine.

The new specimen was probably male, a fruit-eater and was slightly smaller than a chimpanzee, researchers say.

It's very impressive because of its completeness
David Begun, University of Toronto

Palaeontologists were just getting started at the dig when a bulldozer churned up a tooth.

Further investigation yielded one of the most complete ape skeletons known from the Miocene Epoch (about 22 to 5.5 million years ago).

Salvador Moyà-Solà of the Miquel Crusafont Institute of Palaeontology in Barcelona and colleagues subsequently found parts of the skull, ribcage, spine, hands and feet, along with other bones.

They have assigned it to an entirely new family and species: Pierolapithecus catalaunicus .

Monkey business

Great apes are thought - on the basis of genetic and other evidence - to have separated from another primate group known as the lesser apes some time between 11 and 16 million years ago (The lesser apes include gibbons and siamang).

It is fascinating, therefore, for a specimen like Pierolapithecus to turn up right in this window.

Scientists think the creature lived after the lesser apes went their own evolutionary way, but before the great apes began their own diversification into different forms such as orang-utans, gorillas, chimps and, of course, humans.

" Pierolapithecus probably is, or is very close to, the last common ancestor of great apes and humans," said Professor Moyà-Solà.

The new ape's ribcage, lower spine and wrist display signs of specialised climbing abilities that link it with modern great apes, say the researchers.

The overall orthograde - or upright - body design of this animal and modern-day great apes is thought to be an adaptation to vertical climbing and suspending the body from branches.

The Miocene ape fossil record is patchy; so finding such a complete fossil from this time period is unprecedented.

"It's very impressive because of its completeness," David Begun, professor of palaeoanthropology at the University of Toronto, Canada, told the BBC News website.

"I think the authors are right that it fills a gap between the first apes to arrive in Europe and the fossil apes that more closely resemble those living today."

Planet of the apes

Other scientists working on fossil apes were delighted by the discovery. But not all were convinced by the conclusions drawn by the Spanish researchers.

Professor Begun considers it unlikely that Pierolapithecus was ancestral to orang-utans.

"I haven't seen the original fossils. But there are four or five important features of the face, in particular, that seem to be closer to African apes," he explained.

"To me the possibility exists that it is already on the evolutionary line to African apes and humans."

Professor David Pilbeam, director of the Peadbody Museum in Cambridge, US, was even more sceptical about the relationship of Pierolapithecus to modern great apes: "To me it's a very long stretch to link this to any of the living apes," he told the BBC News website.

"I think it's unlikely that you would find relatives of the apes that live today in equatorial Africa and Asia up in Europe.

"But it's interesting in that it appears to show some adaptations towards having a trunk that's upright because it's suspending itself [from branches].

"It also has some features that show quadrupedal (four-legged) behaviour. Not quadrupedal in the way chimps or gorillas are, but more in the way that monkeys are - putting their fingers down flat," he explained.

During the Miocene, Earth really was the planet of the apes.

As many as 100 different ape species roamed the Old World, from France to China in Eurasia and from Kenya to Namibia in Africa.

------------------
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/s ... 014351.stm

Published: 2004/11/18 19:01:57 GMT

© BBC MMIV
 
Anthropologists find 4.5 million-year-old hominid fossils in Ethiopia

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Scientists from Indiana University Bloomington and seven other institutions have unearthed skeletal fossils of a human ancestor believed to have lived about 4.5 million years ago. The fossils, described in this week's Nature (Jan. 20), will help scientists piece together the mysterious transformation of primitive chimp-like hominids into more human forms.

The fossils were retrieved from the Gona Study Area in northern Ethiopia, only one of two sites to yield fossil remains of Ardipithecus ramidus.

"A few windows are now opening in Africa to glance into the fossil evidence on the earliest hominids," said IUB paleoanthropologist Sileshi Semaw, who led the research.

Semaw and colleagues also report new evidence that suggests the human ancestors lived in close quarters with a menagerie of antelope, rhinos, monkeys, giraffes and hippos in a northern Ethiopia that was far wetter than it is today. The environmental reconstructions suggest a mosaic of habitats, from woodlands to grasslands. Research is continuing at Gona to determine which habitats A. ramidus preferred.
[...]

Full press release from--> Indiana University
 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4322687.stm
Scientists unearth early skeleton


Scientists say they believe they have discovered one of the oldest skeletons of an early human ancestor.

US and Ethiopian scientists working in north-eastern Ethiopia say the remains of the hominid, or primitive human, date back four million years.

The skeleton is said to be that of the world's oldest animal walking on two feet, or biped.

The bones were found just 60km (40 miles) from the site where Lucy, one of the first hominids, was discovered.

Lucy, whose remains were found in 1974, lived 3.2 million years ago and is thought to have given rise to the Homo line which ended in modern humans.

Like Lucy?

But the as yet unnamed fossil found in February at a new site called Mille in Afar region of Ethiopia, might be a far earlier brother or sister.

Researchers believe it could provide valuable clues to the phases of human evolution before her.

"This is the world's oldest biped," said Bruce Latimer of the national history museum in Ohio, who made the discovery with his Ethiopian colleague Yohannes Haile-Selassie.


"It will revolutionise the way we see human evolution."

Researchers at the site say they have found a complete tibia from the lower part of the leg, parts of the thighbone or femur, ribs, vertebrae, a collarbone, pelvis and a complete shoulder blade.

They say the find is significant because, due to the structure of the ankle bone, the individual almost certainly walked upright like modern mankind.

"This skeleton helps us to understand what happened in the joints, how walking upright occurred, what we never had before," Mr Latimer said.

The find, one of a series of hominid fossils which are still being unearthed, still holds many mysteries, he added.

"It is already clear that the individual was larger than Lucy, it has longer legs than Lucy [...] but it is older which is strange."

The discovery of the remains of at least nine primitive hominids of similar age to the latest find was announced in January.

Those fossils, which were uncovered at As Duma in the north of Ethiopia, were mostly teeth and jaw fragments, but also include parts of hands and feet.
 
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/science/03/05/ethiopia.hominid.ap/index.html

Fossil find could be first bipedal human ancestor
Team leader: Bones show it walked upright 4 million years ago


ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) -- A team of U.S. and Ethiopian scientists has discovered the fossilized remains of what they believe is humankind's first walking ancestor, a hominid that lived in the wooded grasslands of the Horn of Africa nearly 4 million years ago.

The bones were discovered in February at a new site called Mille, in the northeastern Afar region of Ethiopia, said Bruce Latimer, director of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History in Ohio. They are estimated to be 3.8-4 million years old.

The fossils include a complete tibia, parts of a thigh bone, ribs, vertebrae, a collarbone, pelvis and a complete shoulder blade, or scapula. There also is an ankle bone, which, with the tibia, proves the creature walked upright, said Latimer, co-leader of the team that discovered the fossils.

The bones are the latest in a growing collection of early human fragments that help explain the evolutionary history of man.

"Right now we can say this is the world's oldest bipedal [hominid] and what makes this significant is because what makes us human is walking upright," Latimer said. "This new discovery will give us a picture of how walking upright occurred."

Bipedal refers to an animal that walks upright on two feet. Hominids are humans and their extinct ancestors.

The findings have not been reviewed by outside scientists or published in a scientific journal.

Leslie Aiello, an anthropologist and head of the Graduate School at University College in London said, however, that the finds could be significant.

"It sounds like a significant find ... particularly if they have a partial skeleton because it allows you to speculate on biomechanics," Aiello, who was not part of the discovery team, told The Associated Press by telephone from Britain.

Paleontologists previously discovered in Ethiopia the remains of a hominid called Ardipithecus ramidus, a transitional creature with significant apelike characteristics that lived as far back as 4.5 million years. There is some dispute over whether it walked upright on two legs, Latimer and Aiello said.

Scientists know little about A. ramidus. A few skeletal fragments suggest it was even smaller than Australopithecus afarensis, the 3.2 million-year-old species widely known by the nearly complete "Lucy" fossil, which measures about 4 feet tall.

Scientists are yet to classify the new find, which they believe falls between A. ramidus and A. afarensis. The fossils would help "join the dots" between the two hominids, said Yohannes Haile-Selassie, an Ethiopian scientist and curator at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History as well as a co-leader of the discovery team.

"This discovery will tell us much about how our 4-million-year-old ancestors walked, how tall they were and what they looked like," he said. "It opens the door on a poorly known time period and [the fossils] are important in that they will help us understand the early phases of human evolution before Lucy."

The specimen is the only the fourth partial skeleton ever to be discovered that is older than 3 million years. It was found after two months of excavation at Mille, 37 miles from the famous Lucy discovery.

"It is a once-in-a-lifetime find," Latimer said.
 
Chad skull 'leans to human line'

Experts are a step closer to answering whether an ancient skull from Africa belonged to a possible human ancestor or to a creature closer to apes.

Fresh fossil finds from Chad in central Africa, as well as a new analysis of the skull, seem to confirm "Toumaï" was closer to us, Nature magazine reports.

The Toumaï specimen was unearthed in Chad in 2002 to international acclaim.

But rival researchers attacked claims by the discovery team that it was the oldest hominid, or human-like creature.

It may well have given rise to bipedal hominids, but it's not yet a bipedal hominid
Martin Pickford, National Museum of Natural History

The near-complete skull, pieces of jawbone and several teeth unveiled in 2002 were found in the desert of northern Chad by a team led by Michel Brunet, at the University of Poitiers, France.

At six to seven million years old, Sahelanthropus tchadensis , (better known by its nickname Toumaï), dates to about the time where, according to genetic data, the ancestors of humans and the ancestors of chimpanzees went their separate evolutionary ways.

The find had a puzzling combination of modern and primitive features, with an ape-like brain size and skull shape, combined with a more human-like face and teeth.

It also sported a remarkably large brow-ridge, more similar to that of hominids.

But at least one anthropologist argued that the fossil could belong to a female forerunner of the gorilla.

Now Brunet and colleagues report discovering two new jaw fragments and the crown of a tooth in the same geographical area as the earlier fossils.

The authors say their analysis reveals key similarities to hominid fossils and differences from African apes that support the idea Toumaï was a hominid.

Virtual reconstruction

In a separate paper, a team including Brunet and Christoph Zollikofer of the University of Zürich in Switzerland, presents a 3D computer reconstruction of the skull, which had been badly distorted in the ground.

The team has essentially "unmangled" the skull, and the reconstruction appears to confirm S. tchadensis shared key features with later hominids.

In addition, the position of the foramen magnum - the hole where the spinal cord enters - is similar to that in humans but not apes.

This suggests Toumaï was bipedal; the creature walked upright like we do.

"We performed a virtual reconstruction because the skull is heavily mineralised and distorted. It is impossible to do one by physical means," Professor Zollikofer told the BBC.

"[The find] is absolutely unique for several reasons. First, because of its age. Then because of its geographical location. Third, because it is incredibly complete."

Not swayed

Martin Pickford, of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, is one of those scientists unconvinced by arguments that Toumaï is a hominid.

"What we're saying is that it is an ape-like animal. It may well have given rise to bipedal hominids, but it's not yet a bipedal hominid," Dr Pickford told the BBC.

Professor Zollikofer commented: "I would say most of the disagreement over the fossil came from the fact that it is distorted, so it is quite difficult to recognise the diagnostic hominid features."

If Toumaï really does belong on the human branch of the evolutionary tree, its discovery calls into question certain assumptions about our prehistory.

The fossils were found some 2,500km (1,500 miles) west of the African Great Rift Valley - traditionally seen as humankind's ancestral home due to the wealth of hominid fossils that have been discovered there.

The discovery of S. tchadensis implies early hominids ranged far wider from East Africa, and far earlier, than previously thought.

It also suggests that hominids evolved quickly when they set off on their own evolutionary path.

---------------------
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/s ... 416757.stm

Published: 2005/04/06 17:27:00 GMT

© BBC MMV

Nature. 434 (7034)

New material of the earliest hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad 752-5
MICHEL BRUNET, FRANCK GUY, DAVID PILBEAM, DANIEL E. LIEBERMAN, ANDOSSA LIKIUS, HASSANE T. MACKAYE, MARCIA S. PONCE DE LEÓN, CHRISTOPH P. E. ZOLLIKOFER & PATRICK VIGNAUD

Discoveries in Chad by the Mission Paléoanthropologique Franco-Tchadienne have substantially changed our understanding of early human evolution in Africa. In particular, the TM 266 locality in the Toros-Menalla fossiliferous area yielded a nearly complete cranium (TM 266-01-60-1), a mandible, and several isolated teeth assigned to Sahelanthropus tchadensis and biochronologically dated to the late Miocene epoch (about 7 million years ago). Despite the relative completeness of the TM 266 cranium, there has been some controversy about its morphology and its status in the hominid clade. Here we describe new dental and mandibular specimens from three Toros-Menalla (Chad) fossiliferous localities (TM 247, TM 266 and TM 292) of the same age. This new material, including a lower canine consistent with a non-honing C/P3 complex, post-canine teeth with primitive root morphology and intermediate radial enamel thickness, is attributed to S. tchadensis. It expands the hypodigm of the species and provides additional anatomical characters that confirm the morphological differences between S. tchadensis and African apes. S. tchadensis presents several key derived features consistent with its position in the hominid clade close to the last common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans.


Virtual cranial reconstruction of Sahelanthropus tchadensis 755-9
CHRISTOPH P. E. ZOLLIKOFER, MARCIA S. PONCE DE LEÓN, DANIEL E. LIEBERMAN, FRANCK GUY, DAVID PILBEAM, ANDOSSA LIKIUS, HASSANE T. MACKAYE, PATRICK VIGNAUD & MICHEL BRUNET

Previous research in Chad at the Toros-Menalla 266 fossiliferous locality (about 7 million years old) uncovered a nearly complete cranium (TM 266-01-60-1), three mandibular fragments and several isolated teeth attributed to Sahelanthropus tchadensis. Of this material, the cranium is especially important for testing hypotheses about the systematics and behavioural characteristics of this species, but is partly distorted from fracturing, displacement and plastic deformation. Here we present a detailed virtual reconstruction of the TM 266 cranium that corrects these distortions. The reconstruction confirms that S. tchadensis is a hominid and is not more closely related to the African great apes. Analysis of the basicranium further indicates that S. tchadensis might have been an upright biped, suggesting that bipedalism was present in the earliest known hominids, and probably arose soon after the divergence of the chimpanzee and human lineages.
 
Although not as early as some of the finds (and certainly in Homo) mentioned here they are some of the earliest hominids found outside Africa and do through some very interesting light on the initial raditation of hominids and pos. about the behavioural 'toolkit' we had at the time.

Early hominid 'cared for elderly'

Ancient hominids from the Caucasus may have fed and cared for their elderly, a new fossil find has indicated.

The 1.77 million-year-old specimen, which is described in Nature magazine, was completely toothless and well over 40; a grand old age at the time.

This may suggest that the creature lived in a complex society which was capable of showing compassion.

These hominids - like humans - may also have valued the old for their years of acquired knowledge, researchers think.

"It is pretty amazing that [hominid] society fostered this kind of thing nearly 1.8 million years ago," said co-author Reid Ferring, of the University of North Texas, US.

"Almost any way we cut it, this is very unusual and it is a totally new insight into the social relations of this early hominid."

Little people

The senior specimen is one of a collection of hominid finds from the famous site of Dmanisi, Georgia.

These people were remarkably human in a lot of ways
Co-author Reid Ferring

The little "people" - who stood at around four feet tall - have caused a lively debate amongst palaeoanthropologists.

So far it has been tricky to work out exactly what they are. Many experts believe it was Homo erectus who first ventured out of Africa and spread around Asia.

But Dmanisi hominids were not typical of the tall-standing, big brained Homo erectus - instead they were short, small-brained, thin browed and probably dragged their knuckles along the ground like apes.

This has led some to believe they may have been Homo habilis . But ape-like Homo habilis was not thought to have left Africa - so the confusion continues.

Although the Dmanisi hominids had no fire and only used very basic chopping and cutting tools, the new discovery does hint at a new level of sophistication.

"My personal opinion is that these people were remarkably human in a lot of ways," said Professor Ferring. "These were tiny people living in a very harsh environment.

"I think we can only compare them to modern humans in their social skills and behaviours, which allowed them to survive against all these odds."

Death sentence

The ageing individual - who lost his teeth some years before death, palaeoanthropologists estimate - would not have been able to chew the raw meat or fibrous plants which made up the creatures' normal diet.

For most animals - other than humans, and their now extinct cousin the Neanderthal - this would have been a death sentence.

But, Professor Ferring believes, this "old man" must have been kept alive by being fed the choice soft morsels like brain, marrow and succulent berries.

"Cooking was not in the equation and it is inconceivable that he would have been able to eat raw meat," he said. "So he must have consumed much more than his share of these very choice soft foods.

"He was either being cared for or being given very preferential treatment."

Whether his group was just being kind, or whether there was an ulterior motive, can only be guessed at. It is possible, according to Professor Ferring, that the toothless man was an extremely useful member of his society.

"It is unclear whether he could contribute to the livelihood of the whole group in terms of procuring food and defending the group and caring for young," Professor Ferring told the BBC News website.

Elderly members of the group may also have been valuable for cultural reasons, just like in modern societies.

Professor Ferring said: "This person might have had a function similar to old people in hunter gatherer societies - his experience and knowledge may have given him high status."

--------------
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/s ... 418363.stm

Published: 2005/04/07 11:21:34 GMT

© BBC MMV

Nature. 434 (7034)

Anthropology: The earliest toothless hominin skull 717
DAVID LORDKIPANIDZE, ABESALOM VEKUA, REID FERRING, G. PHILIP RIGHTMIRE, JORDI AGUSTI, GOCHA KILADZE, ALEXANDER MOUSKHELISHVILI, MEDEA NIORADZE, MARCIA S. PONCE DE LEÓN, MARTHA TAPPEN & CHRISTOPH P. E. ZOLLIKOFER

The site of Dmanisi in the Eurasian republic of Georgia has yielded striking hominin, faunal and archaeological material as evidence for the presence of early Homo outside Africa 1.77 million years ago, documenting an important episode in human evolution. Here we describe a beautifully preserved skull and jawbone from a Dmanisi hominin of this period who had lost all but one tooth several years before death. This specimen not only represents the earliest case of severe masticatory impairment in the hominin fossil record to be discovered so far, but also raises questions about alternative subsistence strategies in early Homo.
 
Fossils of Apelike Creature Still Stir Lineage Debate

By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD

Published: April 12, 2005

Three years ago, a French-led team of paleoanthropologists reported finding in central Africa a skull and other bones of a possible human ancestor that lived seven million years ago, close to the fateful time when the human and chimpanzee lineages diverged.

The discoverers described the fossils as belonging to the earliest known humanlike primate, or hominid. They named the new species Sahelanthropus tchadensis and commonly call it Toumai, meaning "hope of life" in the local language of Chad. But several other researchers disputed the interpretation, contending that the skull was too apelike to be a hominid.

So the discoverers went back to Chad and found additional evidence, particularly two jawbones and an upper premolar tooth, that they say confirms their original conclusion. Another science group has produced a computer-generated reconstruction of what Toumai looked like.

In a report in the current issue of the journal Nature, Dr. Michel Brunet of the University of Poitiers in France and his colleagues said the new fossils established critical differences between Toumai and African apes, features consistent with a species "close to the last common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans."

The size of Toumai's brain and the shape of its skull were similar to a chimp's, but its face, teeth and brow ridge were more like a hominid's. Another group, led by Dr. Christoph P. E. Zollikofer of the University of Zurich, said the reconstruction of the badly damaged and fragmented skull confirmed that Toumai "is a hominid and is not more closely related to the African great apes."

In a separate report in Nature, Dr. Zollikofer's team said the fossils and the three-dimensional reconstruction indicated that Toumai might have walked upright.

One of the skeptics, Dr. Martin Pickford of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, has not changed his mind. "What we're saying is that it is an apelike animal," he told the BBC. "It may well have given rise to bipedal hominids, but it's not yet a bipedal hominid."

Other scientists said the new research, particularly the digital restoration of the skull, strengthened Toumai's hominid credentials.

Dr. Ian Tattersall, a paleoanthropologist at the American Museum of Natural History, said the poor condition of the fossils would continue to raise questions about the new species. He said he supported the hominid status for Toumai but was "eager to make further finds in Chad, perhaps something in better condition."

Source (requires free registration)

https://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/12/...elike-creature-still-stir-lineage-debate.html
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Another report (some nice photos too):

Is 7-million-year-old skull really human?

'One of the greatest discoveries of the past 100 years'

By William J. Cromie
Harvard News Office

Who or what was Toumai? Those who found his skull in 2001 insist he is the oldest human ancestor, a small fellow who lived by an African lake some 7 million years ago. Doubters have maintained that the skull belongs to an ancient chimpanzee or a gorilla.

More recent findings, announced last week (April 7), include teeth and jaw fragments unearthed in Toumai's neighborhood. Together with a reconstruction of his cracked skull, they support the idea that he was more man than ape.

When the skull was first found, Daniel Lieberman, a professor of anthropology at Harvard, called it "one of the greatest discoveries of the past 100 years." After studying the new evidence, Lieberman stands by that statement. "The next oldest, reasonably complete humanlike skull we have is just over 3 million years old," he notes. "The Toumai fossils go back close to the time when anthropologists believe our ancestors separated from chimpanzees."

In 2001, Michel Brunet, from the University of Poitiers in France, led a team who found the cracked and distorted cranium, along with two lower jaw fragments and some teeth, in a blisteringly hot, arid part of Chad, in north central Africa. The discovery pulled up the tree of evolution by its roots.

Brunet and his team named the creature Toumai, which means "hope of life" in the local language. It's a name often given to newborns in Chad. The fossils make him out to be about 3 to 4 feet tall, with thick brow ridges, and a flat, somewhat humanlike face. Close examination of the new teeth and jaw parts lead to the conclusion that they are of the same ancient age and belonged to creatures like Toumai.

The fossils are pictured and described in two articles in the April 7 issue of the journal Nature. The two reports are the product of an international collaboration among Brunet and his colleagues at the University of Poitiers; Lieberman; David Pilbeam, a professor of anthropology at Harvard; and researchers from the University of Zurich in Switzerland and from Chad.

Walking clues

Neither Lieberman nor Pilbeam did any digging in Chad, but they and former Harvard postdoctoral fellow Franck Guy closely studied the old and new evidence. They were particularly intrigued with what they saw when they cooperated with Brunet's team and researchers at the University of Zurich to restore Toumai's beat-up skull with the help of sophisticated computer techniques. Details of the skull and its relation to his face reveal that Toumai's neck would have pointed downward when he walked or stood up. That's typical of humans, not of apes and other knuckle walkers.

Another clue comes from a bony area at the base of the cranium, called the nuchal plane. It projects backward from near the spine and provides attachment for muscles that help balance the head when someone walks or runs. In Toumai, it angles gently upward, indicating that he could hold his head straight while walking on two legs. In apes, that angle is much steeper, indicating that they walk on all fours.

"This skull possesses many features suggesting that Toumai habitually walked upright," Lieberman says. "We don't know this with absolute certainty; we'd need to have a pelvis or limb bone to be sure." However, the evidence is strong enough to convince the research team that Toumai was a biped.

"Toumai suggests bipedalism was the key difference between very early human ancestors and apes," Lieberman continues. "Upright walking might literally have been the first step towards becoming human."

What's more, Toumai boasts a more humanlike face than hominids who lived even millions of years later. (Hominids include all non-apes up to modern men and women.) Take Lucy, the upright hominid who lived in eastern Africa some 3.2 million years ago. Her face is more apelike. Her snout is long and curved. Toumai's snout is shorter and flatter.

Lieberman admits, "We don't know what's going on here." It may be that Lucy comes from an extinct line of hominids. Perhaps, like other hominids, she went off on a dirt road that ended in the woods of extinction rather than traveling the paved highway from apes to modern humans.

One thing Toumai has in common with much younger and larger male hominids is a large heavy brow. "Such a brow ridge screams 'male,'" says Pilbeam. "This is important because small male canine teeth are also an important defining feature of hominids, and Toumai's canines are small."

Getting teeth into it

More clues to Toumai's identity were found in the teeth scattered near his skull. These molars and canines and some jaw fragments come from six to nine different individuals, but they are more human than apish. The canines, especially from males, are small. And the molars - chewing teeth farther back in the mouth, are larger and thicker than those of apes. Chimps' molars are generally smaller and possess thinner enamel coatings.

No one knows what these humanlike creatures sank those teeth into, but apparently there was plenty of food available. Today, the place where their remains were discovered is a hot, bleak, remote desert constantly swept by blowing sand. Seven million years ago, as animal and plant fossils show, it was the site of a lake with grasslands and trees nearby. Ancient fish swam in the lake, along with crocodiles. On land, elephants and antelope roamed, rodents scampered, and monkeys swung in the trees.

Such fossils are key to dating Toumai's remains. Animals much like these lived farther east in what is now Kenya, and roamed over volcanic soils that contain minerals easy to date. That doesn't give a precise number, but a possible range of 6 to 7 million years. As researchers have refined this number, it has moved a bit closer to 7 million.

So there you have it. Longer ago than anthropologists ever imagined before, one of our ancestors was walking around near the southern edge of the Sahara desert. Although you wouldn't hail this short, big-browed fellow as a cousin, Toumai certainly seems to have been more like us than any other animal of that time.

These fossils give researchers and others concerned about our deep past plenty to think, or argue, about. The evolutionary path from ape to man was once compared to a straight ladder. As fossils accumulated, a luxuriantly branching tree became needed to account for all the different hominid skulls, leg bones, arm bones, jaws, and teeth that were discovered. But, notes Pilbeam, "at the base of this tree, there might well have only been one hominid for the first few million years. And that one may have been like Toumai."

Source
Link is dead. The MIA webpage can be retrieved from the Wayback Machine:
https://web.archive.org/web/2016042...harvard.edu/gazette/2005/04.14/01-toumai.html
 
Last edited by a moderator:
This seems like an attempt to generate controversy where it doesn't exist - Out of Africa refers to modern human evolution and this is closer to great ape evolution.

Humans left Asia for Africa, then returned

Jennifer Viegas
Discovery News


Wednesday, 1 June 2005


Three newly discovered primate species that lived 30 million years ago suggest that our ancestors originated in Asia not Africa, challenging the well-known "Out of Africa" theory of human evolution.

But it could be something a bit more complicated, such as "Out of Asia into Africa and Back to Asia", since some researchers now think Asian primates journeyed to Africa, where they evolved into humans, who then travelled both in and out of Africa.

According to a study published in the latest Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, numerous fossil teeth found in the Bugti Hills of central Pakistan were from three new anthropoids.

Anthropoids are the group scientists believe were our world-travelling animal cousins, the primates from which humans evolved.

"The Oligocene period [30 to 25 million years ago] in south Asia was so far totally undocumented palaeontologically," says lead author Dr Laurent Marivaux.

"So, it is not surprising that the discovery of fossilised animals from this period is totally new for science, and that they [may] change or modify substantially our previous view on mammal evolution, notably here, the evolutionary history of anthropoid primates.

"The evolutionary history of these old anthropoid lineages represents the beginnings of the evolutionary history of humans."

Marivaux and his team named the new anthropoids Bugtipithecus inexpectans, Phileosimias kamali and Phileosimias brahuiorum. They were tiny and somewhat similar to today's lemurs, says Marivaux, a palaeontologist at the Institute of Evolutionary Science at Montpellier II University in France.

Their small, underdeveloped teeth reveal the primates probably ate insects and fruit. Climate records for this period suggest that the animals lived in a warm, humid tropical rainforest.

Fossil remains for other animals indicate the primates shared the Asian rainforest with more than 20 different species of rodents, bats, carnivores, deer-like animals, pigs, a rhino-like creature, called baluchitherium, and other primates.

Remains for later primates similar to the new anthropoids have previously been found in China, Burma and Thailand. The newly excavated teeth now indicate that anthropoids had a larger range in Asia than thought, since the animals made their way to Pakistan.

More evidence

Dr Christopher Beard, curator and head of the Section of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, says he generally agrees with the new conclusions.

"Together, the fossil anthropoid primates that are known from China, Thailand, Myanmar and now Pakistan constitute an impressive amount of data indicating that the 'higher primate' lineage that today includes all monkeys, apes, and humans must have originated in Asia, not in Africa as earlier scientists believed," Beard says.

"[The new evidence indicates] early members of this [anthropoid Asian group] made its way to Africa, where they continued to evolve and diversify, eventually giving rise to living monkeys, apes and humans."

Christopher Wills, professor of biological sciences at the University of California, San Diego, agrees it was likely that early anthropoid evolution did not just occur in Africa.

Wills says the evolution probably included "substantial migrations over long distances, in and out of Africa perhaps".

Beard and Marivaux say the early anthropoids that stayed in Asia continued to evolve too, but not in a direction that led to apes and humans.

Most experts say humans only emerged in Africa.

www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s1381883.htm

Paper
 
Source
The roots of civilization trace back to ... roots
MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL- About five to seven million years ago, when the lineage of humans and chimpanzees split, edible root plants similar to rutabagas and turnips may have been one of the reasons. According to research by anthropologists Greg Laden of the University of Minnesota and Richard Wrangham of Harvard University, the presence of fleshy underground storage organs like roots and tubers must have sustained our ancestors who left the rain forest to colonize the savannah. They have published their research in the October issue of the Journal of Human Evolution.
"You can think of roots as a kind of 'conveyor belt' ... they were somewhat available in the forest, but abundant on the savannah," said Laden. "Once roots were 'discovered,' chimp-like creatures would not only be able to survive on the savannah, but may well have been compelled to extend their range into more and more open habitats."

When our ape ancestors moved -- for reasons unknown -- onto the open, relatively treeless savannah, they left behind the rain forest and its abundance of fruit and leaves, the mainstays of modern chimpanzee diets. Laden and Wrangham believe that savannah-dwellers may have adopted game as their primary food in place of fruit. But for a fallback food, they may well have taken to eating roots and tubers, which are much more abundant on savannahs than in rain forests.

In the article, Laden and Wrangham say that the evidence lies in the fossil record, specifically teeth and jaws. The teeth and jaws of savannah dwelling apes evolved into large massive jaws, jaw muscles and molars, ideal for grinding roots instead of shearing leaves. The size of the teeth and jaws reflect the apes' secondary food source (roots) instead of primary foods like meats and fruits, which do not require such massive chewing abilities.

While our ancient ancestors may have left the rain forest for the savannah in pursuit of game meat, it was the ability to find and eat roots that may have contributed to the initial split between humans and the other apes. Laden and Wrangham's paper is available at www.sciencedirect.com
 
Evolution's human and chimp twist

Evolution's human and chimp twist

Humans and chimpanzees may have split away from a common ancestor far more recently than was previously thought. A detailed analysis of human and chimp DNA suggests the lines finally diverged less than 5.4 million years ago.

The finding, published in the journal Nature, is about 1-2 million years later than the fossils have indicated.

A US team says its results hint at the possibility that interbreeding occurred between the two lines for thousands, even millions, of years.

This hybridisation would have been important in swapping genes for traits that allowed the emerging species to survive in their environments, explain the scientists affiliated to the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and the Harvard Medical School.

And it underlines, they believe, just how complex human evolution has been.

"This is a hypothesis; we haven't proved it but it would explain multiple features of our data," said David Reich, assistant professor of genetics at the Harvard Medical School and an author on the Nature paper.

"The hypothesis is that there was gene flow between the ancestors of humans and chimpanzees after their original divergence.

"So, there might have been an original divergence and a separation for long enough that the species became differentiated - for example, we might have adapted features such as upright walking - and then there was a re-mixture event quite a while after; a hybridisation event," he told the Science in Action programme on the BBC World Service.

Gene swapping

Humans and chimps contain DNA sequences that are very similar to each other; the differences are due to mutations, or errors, in the genetic code that have occurred since these animals diverged on to separate evolutionary paths.

By analysing where these differences occur in the animals' genomes, it is possible to get an insight into the two species' histories - the timing of key events in their evolution.

Scientists have been able to do this for some time but the recent projects to fully decode the two primates' genomes have provided details that have taken this type of study to a more advanced level.

The US investigation indicates the human and chimp lines split no more than 6.3 million years ago and probably less than 5.4 million years ago.

It is a problematic finding because of our current understanding of early fossils, such as the famous Toumai specimen uncovered in Chad.

Toumai ( Sahelanthropus tchadensis ) was thought to be right at the foot of the human family tree. It dates to between 6.5 and 7.4 million years ago. In other words, it is older than the point of human-chimp divergence seen in the genetic data.

"It is possible that the Toumai fossil is more recent than previously thought," said Nick Patterson, a senior research scientist and statistician at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and lead author on the Nature paper.

"But if the dating is correct, the Toumai fossil would precede the human-chimp split. The fact that it has human-like features suggests that human-chimp speciation may have occurred over a long period with episodes of hybridisation between the emerging species."

Commenting on the research, Daniel Lieberman, a professor of biological anthropology at Harvard, told the Associated Press: "It's a totally cool and extremely clever analysis.

"My problem is imagining what it would be like to have a bipedal hominid and a chimpanzee viewing each other as appropriate mates, not to put it too crudely."

Story from BBC NEWS:
Published: 2006/05/18 11:00:34 GMT
© BBC MMVI

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/s ... 991470.stm
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Did humans and chimps once interbreed?

* 17 May 2006
* From New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues.
* Bob Holmes


IT GOES to the heart of who we are and where we came from. Our human ancestors were still interbreeding with their chimp cousins long after first splitting from the chimpanzee lineage, a genetic study suggests. Early humans and chimps may even have hybridised completely before diverging a second time. If so, some of the earliest fossils of proto-humans might represent an abortive first attempt to diverge from chimps, rather than being our direct ancestors.

We can observe the traces of this complex history in the human genome today, says David Reich, a population geneticist at the Broad Institute and Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Reich and his colleagues compared the genomes of humans, chimps and gorillas using a "molecular clock" to estimate how long ago the three groups diverged. The further back two species diverged, the more differences will have accumulated between their genome sequences.

The team estimated that humans and chimps diverged no more than 6.3 million years ago, and probably less than 5.4 million years ago, although some parts of the genome showed divergence times up to 4 million years older. Even if we split from our ape relatives 6.3 million years ago, that is still later than some of the earliest fossils showing human-like traits such as altered tooth structure and bipedalism (Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature04789). "That makes the fossil record even more interesting," says Reich. "What were those fossils?"

The answer might lie in a second striking observation. Reich's team found that the X chromosome diverged later than any of the other chromosomes. One way this can arise is if natural selection has been acting unusually strongly on genes on the X chromosome. That is significant because in every animal species studied, genes that make hybrids less fertile than their parental species tend to be found on the X chromosome or its equivalent, so hybridisation can create strong selection pressures on this chromosome.

The best explanation for these surprising findings - the relatively young and variable divergence dates between the human and chimp lineages, and the evidence for strong selection on the X chromosome - would be if the two lineages split sometime before the time of the first proto-human fossils, but later rehybridised (see Diagram) in a "reverse speciation" event (see "When evolution runs backwards"). Natural selection would favour those hybrid individuals whose X chromosomes carried fewest of the genes that lower fertility.

So far, Reich admits, this is only a plausible hypothesis, not a proven fact. For example, he calibrated his molecular clock using the divergence time between humans and macaques, which is estimated at no more than 20 million years ago. If this divergence happened earlier, that would push back the human-chimp split to an earlier date as well - perhaps far enough that there would be no need to invoke hybridisation. At the very least, though, Reich's study shows that the separation between humans and chimps was a long, drawn-out process.

--------
From issue 2552 of New Scientist magazine, 17 May 2006, page 14

www.newscientist.com/article/mg19025525 ... breed.html
 
Evolution

Close cousins
May 18th 2006
From The Economist print edition

Humans could have interbred with chimpanzees


IN A short story by Ian McEwan, “Reflections of a Kept Ape”, a woman takes a pet chimpanzee as her lover. Although truth is often stranger than fiction, a study published this week by scientists in America demonstrates that both can be pretty odd. The research concludes that humans and chimpanzees interbred after the two species first separated, before eventually going their different ways some 5.4m years ago. Humans are thus much more recently related to their closest relatives than was previously thought.

The researchers, led by David Reich of the Broad Institute of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, examined the genetic record of humans and chimpanzees. The sequencing of the human genome was completed in 2001 whereas that of the chimpanzee genome was finished last autumn. The two genomes are alike, differing by only 1.2% over the course of some 3 billion pairs of the genetic “letters” in which the language of genes is written. In fact, almost a third of the shared genes (each of which is several thousand letters long) are identical in the two species.

Instead of looking at average genetic differences, though, Dr Reich and his colleagues used the complete sequences to reveal the evolutionary history of the genomes. Scientists have long suspected that some regions of the human (and chimpanzee) genome must be older than others—that some sections trace their origins far back to the common ancestral population that gave rise to humans and chimps.

Dr Reich and his colleagues examined these common sequences, mindful of the assumption that genes steadily collect mutations as time goes by. They aligned sections of the human and chimpanzee genomes and identified how much they diverged. At different genes, humans share a common genetic ancestor with chimpanzees at different times. By studying more than 31,000 bits of the genome and measuring how closely humans are related to chimpanzees in different places, the scientists were able to study how quickly the species became different from each other. The results were published online this week in Nature.

The team found that it took at least hundreds of thousands of years and, perhaps, 4m years for human and chimpanzee ancestors to stop interbreeding after they began to be differentiated. Humans and chimpanzees were interbreeding for all this time, before finally separating no more than 6.3m years ago and probably less than 5.4m years ago. This is more recent than was thought. Moreover, the argument that the two species were interbreeding over such a long time is, to say the least, controversial.

Most interesting was what the scientists discovered about the X chromosome in humans and chimpanzees. The X is one of two chromosomes that determine a person's (or a chimp's) sex. Females carry two copies of the X chromosome while males carry one X and one Y chromosome. The progeny of interbreeding start with a big evolutionary disadvantage. It is thought that if human and chimp ancestors initially became separate species and then started to interbreed, then the hybrid males produced tended to be infertile. (No one knows exactly why males are more affected than females, just that they are in groups ranging from mammals to insects.) A viable hybrid population could only be created if the fertile females mated back to one of the ancestral populations.

The scientists found that human and chimpanzee X chromosomes are relatively similar. Indeed, their differences are roughly some 1.2m years younger than the average of all the non-sex chromosomes. This lends weight to the theory that a viable hybrid population was sustained by interbreeding over a long time.

Further evidence could come from the fossil record. Fossil finds are notoriously difficult to classify—people disagree on which physiological features are important; and each new find represents a class of one. The Toumai skull, found in Chad in 2001 and thought to be the earliest hominid, is between 6m and 7.4m years old. However, Dr Reich points out, if humans and chimpanzees had undergone an initial separation at this time, it could account for why the skull has human-like features, including a relatively flat face without a protruding snout. The interbreeding came after this time.

The researchers, along with other scientists across the world, are now working to sequence the complete genome of other close relatives to humans, including gorillas and orangutans. Primate evolution could yet reveal plenty more oddities.

http://www.economist.com/science/displa ... id=6941737
 
Last edited by a moderator:
:shock:(nicked from wikipedia) Sexual intercourse plays a major role in Bonobo society, being used as a greeting, a means of conflict resolution and post-conflict reconciliation, and as favors traded by the females in exchange for food. Bonobos are the only non-human apes to have been observed engaging in all of the following sexual activities: face-to-face genital sex (most frequently female-female, then male-female and male-male), tongue kissing, and oral sex. This happens within the immediate family as well as outside of it. Bonobos do not form permanent relationships with individual partners.

(I wanted to add a suitably funny comment,but will leave it as it is.)
 
Human ancestors had short legs for combat, not just climbing



This drawing of a male gorilla skeleton illustrates their very short legs. Male gorillas fight to gain access to reproductively mature females. Relatively short legs increase the stability and strength of great apes, and should therefore increase fighting performance. A new University of Utah study suggests human ancestors known as australopiths had short legs for the same reason, not just for climbing trees. (Public domain, from Alfred Brehm, "Brehms Tierleben" ("Brehm's Life of Animals"), Small Edition, 1927.)


Ape-like human ancestors known as australopiths maintained short legs for 2 million years because a squat physique and stance helped the males fight over access to females, a University of Utah study concludes.

"The old argument was that they retained short legs to help them climb trees that still were an important part of their habitat," says David Carrier, a professor of biology. "My argument is that they retained short legs because short legs helped them fight."

The study analyzed leg lengths and indicators of aggression in nine primate species, including human aborigines. It is in the March issue of the journal Evolution.

Creatures in the genus Australopithecus – immediate predecessors of the human genus Homo – had heights of about 3 feet 9 inches for females and 4 feet 6 inches for males. They lived from 4 million to 2 million years ago.

"For that entire period, they had relatively short legs – longer than chimps' legs but shorter than the legs of humans that came later," Carrier says.

"So the question is, why did australopiths retain short legs for 2 million years? Among experts on primates, the climbing hypothesis is the explanation. Mechanically, it makes sense. If you are walking on a branch high above the ground, stability is important because if you fall and you're big, you are going to die. Short legs would lower your center of mass and make you more stable."

Yet Carrier says his research suggests short legs helped australopiths fight because "with short legs, your center of mass is closer to the ground. It's going to make you more stable so that you can't be knocked off your feet as easily. And with short legs, you have greater leverage as you grapple with your opponent."

While Carrier says his aggression hypothesis does not rule out the possibility that short legs aided climbing, but "evidence is poor because the apes that have the shortest legs for their body size spend the least time in trees – male gorillas and orangutans."

He also notes that short legs must have made it harder for australopiths "to bridge gaps between possible sites of support when climbing and traveling through the canopy."

Nevertheless, he writes, "The two hypotheses for the evolution of relatively short legs in larger primates, specialization for climbing and specialization for aggression, are not mutually exclusive. Indeed, selection for climbing performance may result in the evolution of a body configuration that improves fighting performance and vice versa."

Great Apes' Short Legs Provide Evidence for Australopith Aggression

All modern great apes – humans, chimps, orangutans, gorillas and bonobos – engage in at least some aggression as males compete for females, Carrier says.

Carrier set out to find how aggression related to leg length. He compared Australian aborigines with eight primate species: gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, orangutans, black gibbons, siamang gibbons, olive baboons and dwarf guenon monkeys. Carrier used data on aborigines because they are a relatively natural population.

For the aborigines and each primate species, Carrier used the scientific literature to obtain typical hindlimb lengths and data on two physical features that previously have been shown to correlate with male-male competition and aggressiveness in primates:

-- The weight difference between males and females in a species. Earlier studies found males fight more in species with larger male-female body size ratios.

-- The male-female difference in the length of canine teeth, which are next to the incisors and are used for biting during fights.

Carrier used male-female body size ratios and canine tooth size ratios as numerical indicators for aggressiveness because field studies of primates have used varying criteria to rate aggression. He says it would be like having a different set of judges for each competitor in subjective Olympic events like diving or ice dancing.

The study found that hindlimb length correlated inversely with both indicators of aggressiveness: Primate species with greater male-female differences in body weight and length of the canine teeth had shorter legs, and thus display more male-male combat.

There was no correlation between arm length and the indicators of aggression. Carrier says arms are used for fighting, but "for other things as well: climbing, handling food, grooming. Thus, arm length is not related to aggression in any simple way."

Verifying the Findings

Carrier conducted various statistical analyses to verify his findings. First, he corrected for each species' limb lengths relative to their body size. Primates with larger body sizes tend to have shorter legs, humans excepted. Without taking that into account, the correlation between body size and aggression indicators might be false.

Another analysis corrected for the fact different primate species are related. For example, if three closely related species all have short legs, it might be due to the relationship – an ancestor with short legs – and not aggression.

Even with the corrections, short legs still correlated significantly with the two indicators of aggressiveness.

The study also found that females in each primate species except humans have relatively longer legs than males. "If it is mainly the males that need to be adapted for fighting, then you'd expect them to have shorter legs for their body size," Carrier says.

He notes there are exceptions to that rule. Bonobos have shorter legs than chimps, yet they are less aggressive. Carrier says the correlation between short legs and aggression may be imperfect because legs are used for many other purposes than fighting.

Humans "are a special case" and are not less aggressive because they have longer legs, Carrier says. There is a physical tradeoff between aggression and economical walking and running. Short, squat australopiths were strong and able to stand their ground when shoved, but their short legs made them ill-suited for distance running. Slender, long-legged humans excel at running. Yet, they also excel at fighting. In a 2004 study, Carrier made a case that australopiths evolved into lithe, long-legged early humans only when they learned to make weapons and fight with them.

Now he argues that even though australopiths walked upright on the ground, the reason they retained short legs for 2 million years was not so much that they spent time in trees, but "the same thing that selected for short legs in the other great apes: male-male aggression and competition over access to reproductively active females."

In other words, shorter legs increased the odds of victory when males fought over access to females – access that meant passing their genetic traits to offspring.

Yet, "we don't really know how aggressive australopiths were," Carrier says. "If they were more aggressive than modern humans, they were exceptionally nasty animals."

Why Should We Care that Australopiths Were Short and Nasty?

"Given the aggressive behavior of modern humans and apes, we should not be surprised to find fossil evidence of aggressive behavior in the ancestors of modern humans," Carrier says. "This is important because we have a real problem with violence in modern society. Part of the problem is that we don't recognize we are relatively violent animals. Many people argue we are not violent. But we are violent. If we want to prevent future violence we have to understand why we are violent."

"To some extent, our evolutionary past may help us to understand the circumstances in which humans behave violently," he adds. "There are a number of independent lines of evidence suggesting that much of human violence is related to male-male competition, and this study is consistent with that."

Nevertheless, male-male competition doesn't fully explain human violence, Carrier says, noting other factors such as hunting, competing with other species, defending territory and other resources, and feeding and protecting offspring.

Source: University of Utah


http://www.physorg.com/news92892646.html
 
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/03/070324133018.htm


Source: New York University
Date: March 27, 2007

Man's Earliest Direct Ancestors Looked More Apelike Than Previously Believed
Science Daily — Modern man"s earliest known close ancestor was significantly more apelike than previously believed, a New York University College of Dentistry professor has found.


Top: Dr. Richard Leakey's reconstruction shows an erroneous vertical facial profile on a 1.9 million-year-old early human skull. Bottom: Dr. Timothy Bromage's computer-simulated reconstruction shows the same skull with a distinctly protruding jaw. Dr. Bromage used the green and red lines to compare the location of the eyes, ears, and mouth, which must be in precise relationship to one another in all mammals. (Credit: Image courtesy of New York University) Ads by Google Advertise on this site


A computer-generated reconstruction by Dr. Timothy Bromage, a paleoanthropologist and Adjunct Professor of Biomaterials and of Basic Science and Craniofacial Biology, shows a 1.9 million-year-old skull belonging to Homo rudolfensis, the earliest member of the human genus, with a surprisingly small brain and distinctly protruding jaw, features commonly associated with more apelike members of the hominid family living as much as three million years ago.

Dr. Bromage"s findings call into question the extent to which H. rudolfensis differed from earlier, more apelike hominid species. Specifically, he is the first scientist to produce a reconstruction of the skull that questions renowned paleontologist and archeologist Richard Leakey"s depiction of modern man"s earliest direct ancestor as having a vertical facial profile and a relatively large brain -- an interpretation widely accepted until now.

Dr. Bromage"s reconstruction also suggests that humans developed a larger brain and more vertical face with a less pronounced jaw and smaller teeth at least 300,000 years later than commonly believed, perhaps as recently as 1.6 million to one million years ago, when two later species, H. ergaster and H. erectus, lived. Dr. Bromage presented his findings today at the annual scientific session of the International Association for Dental Research in New Orleans.

The fragmented skull Dr. Bromage reconstructed was originally discovered in Kenya in 1972 by Dr. Leakey, who reassembled it by hand and dated it at nearly three million years of age, an estimate revised to 1.9 million years by scientists who later discovered problems with the dating.

"Dr. Leakey produced a biased reconstruction based on erroneous preconceived expectations of early human appearance that violated principles of craniofacial development," said Dr. Bromage, whose reconstruction, by contrast, shows a sharply protruding jaw and a brain less than half the size of a modern human"s. These characteristics make the 1.9 million-year-old early human skull more like those of two archaic, apelike hominids, Australopithecus and early Paranthropus, living at least three million and 2.5 million years ago, respectively.

Dr. Bromage developed his reconstruction according to biological principles holding that the eyes, ears, and mouth must be in precise relationship to one another in all mammals.

"Because he did not employ such principles, Dr. Leakey produced a reconstruction that could not have existed in real life," Dr. Bromage concluded.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by New York University.
 
Lucy goes to Houston:
http://www.woai.com/news/local/story.as ... 07eb36d250

Lucy on Tour: Exhibit Pits Museum Against Scientific Community
Last Update: 8/24 3:12 pm

By MONICA RHOR, Associated Press Writer

HOUSTON (AP) -- In the Ethiopian language, she is called Dinknesh -- a name that means the wonderful, the fabulous, the precious.

But to most of the world, she is known as Lucy, a 3.2 million-year-old fossil whose discovery 33 years ago yielded then-unparalleled insights to the origins of humankind.

Next week, the iconic set of bones will be the star of a much-hyped exhibit that is pitting the Houston Museum of Natural Science and the Ethiopian government against the world's scientific community.

Houston museum officials say Lucy must be displayed to offer a glimpse into the history of mankind and a much-needed spotlight on Ethiopia as the cradle of humanity.

But a host of critics, including the world's most influential paleoanthropologists, say it is irresponsible to exhibit a specimen so fragile and valuable. They fear the fossil will be damaged during the exhibit and a projected six-year tour.

Famed fossil hunter Richard Leakey reproached the Houston museum for using Lucy as a "prostitute" to spur ticket sales, extraordinarily high at $20. Noted museums such as The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and the American Museum of Natural History in New York refused offers to exhibit Lucy.

Ethiopian immigrants in Houston are urging a boycott of the exhibit, which will run from Aug. 31 to April 20, 2008.

"There is a lot of damage you can't see with the naked eyes, caused just by touching her and handling her," said Yohannes Haile-Selassie, anthropology curator at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, where Lucy was studied for six years after her discovery in 1974, but which has refused to exhibit her.

"I'm just sitting and praying that she comes back safe."

Bringing Lucy to the United States for a museum exhibit also disregards a 1998 UNESCO resolution, signed by scientists from 20 countries, that says such fossils should not be moved outside of the country of origin except for compelling scientific reasons.

"There are two views going around. One is that every conceivable effort to protect Lucy for six years will be done. The other view is that there is no way this fossil is not going to be damaged irreparably," said Rick Potts, director of the Smithsonian's Human Origins program, and one of the scientists who objected to touring Lucy.

"If the fossil is going to be packed, unpacked, shipped again for a number of years, it is pretty likely damage will occur."

Houston museum officials had named the Denver Museum of Nature and Science as a possible stop, but spokeswoman Laura Holtman said the museum has not yet decided whether to participate. The Field Museum in Chicago said it was working out the final details for exhibition possibly as late as 2010, said spokeswoman Nancy O'Shea.

For the past 27 years, Lucy has been carefully cached in a climate-controlled safe at the National Museum of Ethiopia, taken out only for scientific research or for public exhibit on two rare occasions.

The Houston exhibit will be the first public viewing outside her homeland. The exhibit, which is being heavily advertised on television and billboards, had already sold 2,150 advance tickets by Thursday.

"The concern that people express about safeguarding Lucy is one we share. We are on the same page," said Dirk Van Tuerenhout, curator of anthropology at the Houston museum. "We will make sure she is kept safe, the same way we have kept safe other artifacts that have come here."

Van Tuerenhout, who would not discuss the costs involved in mounting the Lucy show, said his museum had no problem handling the Dead Sea Scrolls for a 2004-2005 exhibit, noting they were far more fragile than what he called a "robust" Lucy.

Unlike the scrolls, however, Lucy seems to evoke an emotional reaction that goes beyond her scientific import.

"Lucy is not just the property of the Ethiopian people. She belongs to everyone," said Cleveland's Haile-Selassie. "She is the beginning of humanity."

Lucy, a hominid fossil named after the Beatles' song "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," was discovered in the remote Afar province in northeastern Ethiopia. Although not the oldest human ancestor ever found, her skeleton is among the most complete, with about 40 percent of her bones intact.

Recognizable as something human, but not quite human, she likely weighed about 60 pounds and stood about 31/2 feet tall.

Thanks to Lucy, who is classified as Australopithecus afarensis, scientists were first able to establish that human ancestors walked upright before evolving a big brain.

"People care about her. They tend to forget that she is 3 million years old. They forget she is a fossil," said Mamitu Yilma, director of the Ethiopian National Museum. "Lucy is very precious. We don't have any replacement for her. Whenever any fossil is found, they are compared to Lucy."

Even Lucy's departure from Ethiopia -- which took place without fanfare and at night -- stirred a sense of loss and mourning among scientists and many Ethiopians, who say she deserved a better send-off.

However, Lucy did not leave Ethiopia alone.

Yilma and the man who has been Lucy's personal caretaker for the past 20 years both traveled to Houston with the fossil. They flew aboard Ethiopian Airlines, with Lucy's skeleton ensconced in two climate-controlled, foam-filled suitcases that took more than a year to design.

Before Lucy was packed, her caretaker and museum conservators inspected the fossil to check for signs of damage. After her arrival in Houston, she was examined again to ensure that no harm had come on the voyage.

Until she goes on display in Houston, Lucy will be kept in a climate-controlled vault similar to the one at the Ethiopian museum. Once the exhibit opens, the world's most famous fossil will be visible inside a specially designed case.

"It was like when someone you love is getting married, both happy and sad," said Yilma, describing her conflicting emotions when Lucy left Ethiopia. "The one thing that gives me comfort is that I'm here with her."

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
[/quote]
 
Spain dig yields ancient European
By Paul Rincon
Science reporter, BBC News

Scientists have discovered the oldest human remains in western Europe.

A jawbone and teeth discovered at the famous Atapuerca site in northern Spain have been dated between 1.1 and 1.2 million years old.

The finds provide further evidence for the great antiquity of human occupation on the continent, the researchers write in the journal Nature.

Scientists also found stone tools and animal bones with tell-tale cut marks from butchering by humans.

The discovery comprises part of a human's lower jawbone. The remains of seven teeth were found still in place; an isolated tooth, belonging to the same individual, was also unearthed.

The find was made in the Sierra de Atapuerca, a region of gently rolling hills near the Spanish city of Burgos which contain a complex of ancient limestone caves.

These caves have yielded abundant, well-preserved evidence of ancient occupation by humans and have been designated a Unesco World Heritage Site.

The new remains were unearthed at the archaeological site of Sima del Elefante, which lies just a few hundred metres from two other locations which have yielded remains of early Europeans.

"It is the oldest human fossil yet found in Western Europe," said co-author Jose Maria Bermudez de Castro, director of Spain's National Research Centre on Human Evolution (CENIEH) in Burgos.

Ancient migration

Dr Bermudez de Castro told BBC News that the latest find had anatomical features linking it to earlier hominins (modern humans, their ancestors and relatives since divergence from apes) discovered in Dmanisi, Georgia - at the gates of Europe.

The Georgian hominins lived some 1.7 million years ago and represent an early expansion of humans outside Africa.

The researchers therefore suggest that Western Europe was settled by a population of hominins coming from the east.

Once these early people had "won the West" they evolved into a distinct species - Homo antecessor, or "Pioneer Man", say the scientists.

The scientists now plan to investigate whether Pioneer Man might have been ancestral to Neanderthals and to even our own species Homo sapiens.

"In terms of European prehistory, this [find] is very significant," said Professor Chris Stringer, research leader in human origins at London's Natural History Museum.

The timing of the earliest human habitation in Europe has been controversial.

"The earliest hominins outside Africa are those from Dmanisi in Georgia. After that, we have occupations in Europe, but the ages are not very precise. They are also without hominin [remains]," said Dr Marina Mosquera, a co-author from the Rovira i Virgili University in Tarragona, Spain.

Reliable date

The Spanish researchers used three different techniques to date the new fossils: palaeomagnetism, cosmogenic nuclide dating and biostratigraphy.

The researchers said the new find represented the earliest reliably dated evidence of human occupation in Europe.

"What we have are the European descendents of the first migration out of Africa," said Dr Mosquera.

Professor Stringer said that until more material was discovered from Atapuerca, he was cautious about assigning the new specimen to the species Homo antecessor.

But he added: "However the specimen is classified, when combined with the emerging archaeological evidence, it suggests that southern Europe began to be colonised from western Asia not long after humans had emerged from Africa - something which many of us would have doubted even five years ago."

"It gives us confidence that Europe was not left out of the picture of the spread of early humans. Early humans got to Java and China by 1.5 million years ago and certainly some of the animal remains found at those Asian sites are found in Western Europe too."

He explained that the people at Sima del Elefante had made primitive stone tools and would have had relatively small brains. The outside of the jawbone had some primitive anatomical features, but the inside displayed some more advanced characteristics, he added.

This suggested they may have been evolving towards humans which are known from much later in time, such as Homo heidelbergensis.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7313005.stm

Fascinating diagram of human evolution at the end of the piece.
 
ramonmercado said:
Humans could have interbred with chimpanzees

IN A short story by Ian McEwan, “Reflections of a Kept Ape”, a woman takes a pet chimpanzee as her lover. Although truth is often stranger than fiction, a study published this week by scientists in America demonstrates that both can be pretty odd. The research concludes that humans and chimpanzees interbred after the two species first separated, before eventually going their different ways some 5.4m years ago. Humans are thus much more recently related to their closest relatives than was previously thought.

http://www.economist.com/science/displa ... id=6941737

From the Scotsman:

Exclusive: Half man, half chimp - should we beware the apeman's coming?
By JENNY HAWORTH

A LEADING scientist has warned a new species of "humanzee," created from breeding apes with humans, could become a reality unless the government acts to stop scientists experimenting.

In an interview with The Scotsman, Dr Calum MacKellar, director of research at the Scottish Council on Human Bioethics, warned the controversial draft Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill did not prevent human sperm being inseminated into animals.

He said if a female chimpanzee was inseminated with human sperm the two species would be closely enough related that a hybrid could be born.

He said scientists could possibly try to develop the new species to fill the demand for organ donors.

Leading scientists say there is no reason why the two species could not breed, although they question why anyone would want to try such a technique.

Other hybrid species already created include crossed tigers and lions and sheep and goats.

Dr MacKellar said he feared the consequences if scientists made a concerted effort to cross humans with chimpanzees. He said: "Nobody knows what they would get if they tried hard enough. The insemination of animals with human sperm should be prohibited.

"The Human Fertilisation and Embryo Bill prohibits the placement of animal sperm into a woman The reverse is not prohibited. It's not even mentioned. This should not be the case."

He said if the process was not banned, scientists would be "very likely" to try it, and it would be likely humans and chimps could successfully reproduce.

"If you put human sperm into a frog it would probably create an embryo, but it probably wouldn't go very far," he said.

"But if you do it with a non-human primate it's not beyond the realms of possibility that it could be born alive."

Dr MacKellar said the resulting creature could raise ethical dilemmas, such as whether it would be treated as human or animal, and what rights it would have.

"If it was never able to be self-aware or self-conscious it would probably be considered an animal," he said. "However, if there was a possibility of humanzees developing a conscience, you have a far more difficult dilemma on your hands."

He said fascination would be enough of a motive for scientists to try crossing the two species.

But he also said there was a small chance of scientists using the method to "humanise" organs for transplant into humans. "There's a desperate need for organs. One of the solutions that has been looked at is using animal organs, but because there's a very serious risk of rejection using animal organs in humans they are already trying to humanise these organs.

"If they could create these humanzees who are substantially human but are not considered as humans in law , we could have a large provision of organs."

He wrote to the Department of Health to ask that the gap in the draft legislation be addressed.

The department confirmed that the bill "does not cover the artificial insemination of an animal with human sperm".

It said: "Owing to the significant differences between human and animal genomes, they are incompatible and the development of a foetus or progeny is impossible.

"Therefore such activity would have no rational scientific justification, as there would be no measurable outcome."

Dr MacKellar disagrees. He said: "The chromosomal difference between a goat and a sheep is greater than between humans and chimpanzees."

Professor Bob Millar, director of the Medical Research Council Human Reproductive Sciences Unit, based in Edinburgh, agreed viable offspring would be possible. He said: "Donkeys can mate with horses and create infertile offspring; maybe that could happen with chimpanzees."

But he said he would oppose any such attempt. "It's unnecessary and ridiculous and no serious scientist would consider such a thing. Ethically, it's not appropriate.

"It's also completely impractical. Chimps would never be a source of organs for humans because of the viruses they carry and the low numbers."


Professor Hugh McLachlan, professor of applied philosophy at Glasgow Caledonian University's School of Law and Applied Sciences, said although the idea was "troublesome", he could see no ethical objections to the creation of humanzees.

"Any species came to be what it is now because of all sorts of interaction in the past," he said.

"If it turns out in the future there was fertilisation between a human animal and a non-human animal, it's an idea that is troublesome, but in terms of what particular ethical principle is breached it's not clear to me.

"I share their squeamishness and unease, but I'm not sure that unease can be expressed in terms of an ethical principle."

A Department of Health spokeswoman said: "It's just not a problem. If you inseminate an animal with human sperm, scientifically nothing happens. The species barriers are too great."

http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Exc ... 4028970.jp
 
They are really shaken by these bones.

Ancient Skeleton May Rewrite Earliest Chapter of Human Evolution
http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/co ... 009/1001/1
By Ann Gibbons
ScienceNOW Daily News
1 October 2009

Researchers have unveiled the oldest known skeleton of a putative human ancestor--and it is full of surprises. Although the creature, named Ardipithecus ramidus, had a brain and body the size of a chimpanzee, it did not knuckle-walk or swing through the trees like an ape. Instead, "Ardi" walked upright, with a big, stiff foot and short, wide pelvis, researchers report in Science. "We thought Lucy was the find of the century," says paleoanthropologist Andrew Hill of Yale University, referring to the famous 3.2-million-year-old skeleton that revolutionized thinking about human origins. "But in retrospect, it was not."

Researchers have long argued about whether our early ancestors passed through a great-ape stage in which they looked like protochimpanzees, with short backs; arms adapted for swinging through the trees; and a pelvis and limbs adapted for knuckle-walking (Science, 21 November 1969, p. 953). This "troglodytian," or chimpanzee, model for early human behavior (named for the common chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes) suggests that our ancestors lost many of the key adaptations still found in chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas, such as daggerlike canines and knuckle-walking, which those apes were thought to have inherited from a common ancestor.

Evidence has been hard to come by, however, because there are almost no fossils of early chimpanzees and gorillas. Until now, the oldest known skeleton of a human ancestor was Lucy, who proved in one stroke that our ancestors walked upright before they evolved big brains. But at 3.2 million years old, she was too recent and already too much like a human to reveal much about her primitive origins. As a result, researchers have wondered since her discovery in 1974, what came before her--what did the early members of the human family look like?

Now, that question is being answered in detail for the first time. A multinational team discovered the first parts of the Ar. ramidus skeleton in 1994 in Aramis, Ethiopia. At 4.4 million years old, Ardi is not the oldest fossil proposed as an early hominin, or member of the human family, but it is by far the most complete--including most of the skull and jaw bones, as well as the extremely rare pelvis, hands, and feet. These parts reveal that Ardi had an intermediate form of upright walking, a hallmark of hominins, according to the authors of 11 papers that describe Ardi and at least 35 other individuals of her species. But Ardi still must have spent a lot of time in the trees, the team reports, because she had an opposable big toe. That means she was probably grasping branches and climbing carefully to reach food, to sleep in nests, and to escape predators.



This item requires the Flash plug-in (version 8 or higher). JavaScript must also be enabled in your browser.

Please download the latest version of the free Flash plug-in.

Credit: Science

Ancient tale. Experts discuss the find and its importance (10 min).

Most researchers, who have waited 15 years for the publication of this description and analysis, agree that Ardi is indeed an early hominin. "This is an extraordinarily impressive work of reconstruction and description, well worth waiting for," says paleoanthropologist David Pilbeam of Harvard University. But he takes issue with the idea that the common ancestor of chimps and humans didn't share many traits with the African apes. "I find it hard to believe that the numerous similarities of chimps and gorillas evolved convergently," he says. Regardless, the one thing all scientists can agree on is that the new papers provide a wealth of data for the first time to frame the issues for years. "It would have been very boring if it had looked half-chimp," says paleoanthropologist Alan Walker of Pennsylvania State University, University Park.

A more in-depth version of this story appears in the 2 October issue of Science.
http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/co ... 009/1001/1
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Full text at link

Ardi may be more ape than human
http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100527/ ... 0.267.html

Woodland home and hominid ancestry of Ardipithecus ramidus questioned.

Rex Dalton
Ardi Science coverDoubts have been raised over Ardi's reported classification and habitat.T. White

A fight has broken out over attempts to drag 'Ardi' – the oldest hominid skeleton found – out of the woods where her discoverers say she lived.

And there are new questions about the classification of Ardipithecus ramidus aka Ardi, dated at 4.4 million years old; whether the species found in the Rift Valley of the Afar of Ethiopia is an ape or hominid.

The debate is playing out this week in Science with the publication of two technical comments1,2. One focuses on isotopic data from soils, plants and animals suggesting that the species' habitat was likely to have been a more open savannah with some trees rather than woods; the second contends that A. ramidus is more ape-like than human.
http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100527/ ... 0.267.html
 
Last edited by a moderator:
On their own 2 feet: 3.2 million-year-old fossil foot bone supports humanlike bipedalism in Lucy's species
http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-02-fee ... -bone.html
February 10th, 2011 in Other Sciences / Archaeology & Fossils



This image shows the position of the fourth metatarsal Australopithecus afarensis (AL 333-160) recovered from Hadar, Ethiopia, in a foot skeleton. Credit: Carol Ward/University of Missouri


A fossilized foot bone recovered from Hadar, Ethiopia, shows that by 3.2 million years ago human ancestors walked bipedally with a modern human-like foot, a report that appears Feb. 11 in the journal Science, concludes. The fossil, a fourth metatarsal, or midfoot bone, indicates that a permanently arched foot was present in the species Australopithecus afarensis, according to the report authors, Carol Ward of the University of Missouri, together with William Kimbel and Donald Johanson, of Arizona State University's Institute of Human Origins.

The research helps resolve a long-standing debate between paleoanthropologists who think A. afarensis walked essentially as modern humans do and those who think this species practiced a form of locomotion intermediate between the quadrupedal tree-climbing of chimpanzees and human terrestrial bipedalism. The question of whether A. afarensis had fully developed pedal, or foot, arches has been part of this debate. The fourth metatarsal described in the Science report provides strong evidence for the arches and, the authors argue, support a modern-human style of locomotion for this species. The specimen was recovered from the Hadar locality 333, popularly known as the "First Family Site," the richest source of A. afarensis fossils in eastern Africa, with more than 250 specimens, representing at least 17 individuals, so far known.

"This fourth metatarsal is the only one known of A. afarensis and is a key piece of evidence for the early evolution of the uniquely human way of walking," says Kimbel. "The ongoing work at Hadar is producing rare parts of the skeleton that are absolutely critical for understanding how our species evolved."

Humans, uniquely among primates, have two arches in their feet, longitudinal and transverse, which are composed of the midfoot bones and supported by muscles in the sole of the foot. During bipedal locomotion, these arches perform two critical functions: leverage when the foot pushes off the ground and shock absorption when the sole of the foot meets the ground at the completion of the stride. Ape feet lack permanent arches, are more flexible than human feet and have a highly mobile large toe, important attributes for climbing and grasping in the trees. None of these apelike features are present in the foot of A. afarensis.



Enlarge
Paleoanthropologists report in the Feb. 10 edition of Science on the recovery of a fossilized foot bone recovered from Hadar, Ethiopia, locality 333, popularly known as the "First Family Site," the richest source of Australopithecus afarensis fossils in eastern Africa. Credit: Donald Johanson/Institute of Human Origins/Arizona State University

"Understanding that the foot arches appeared very early in our evolution shows that the unique structure of our feet is fundamental to human locomotion," observes Ward. "If we can understand what we were designed to do and how natural selection shaped the human skeleton, we can gain insight into how our skeletons work today. Arches in our feet were just as important for our ancestors as they are for us."

This species, whose best-known specimen is "Lucy," lived in eastern Africa 3.0????.8 million years ago. Prior to A. afarensis, the species A. anamensis was present in Kenya and Ethiopia from 4.2 to 4.0 million years ago, but its skeleton is not well known. At 4.4 million years ago, Ethiopia's Ardipithecus ramidus is the earliest human ancestor well represented by skeletal remains. Although Ardipithecus appears to have been a part-time terrestrial biped, its foot retains many features of tree-dwelling primates, including a divergent, mobile first toe. The foot of A. afarensis, as with other parts of its skeleton, is much more like that of living humans, implying that by the time of Lucy, our ancestors no longer depended on the trees for refuge or resources.



Enlarge
This is the fossilized foot bone -- fourth metatarsal of Australopithecus afarensis (AL 333-160) -- recovered from Hadar, Ethiopia. Credit: Elizabeth Harmon/Arizona State University

The Hadar project is the longest running paleoanthropology field program in the Ethiopian rift valley, now spanning more than 38 years. Since 1973, the fieldwork at Hadar has produced more than 370 fossil specimens of Australopithecus afarensis between 3.4 and 3.0 million years ago – one of the largest collections of a single fossil hominin species in Africa – as well as one of the earliest known fossils of Homo and abundant Oldowan stone tools (ca. 2.3 million).

Through ASU's Institute of Human Origins, the Hadar project plays an important role in training Ethiopian scholars by offering graduate degree and postdoctoral opportunities in the U.S. Promotion of local awareness of the global scientific importance and Ethiopian cultural heritage value of the Hadar site is also a project priority. Additionally, the fundraising phase of a planned "Hadar Interpretive Center" at Eloaha town, 30 kilometers from the site, was successfully completed in January 2011.

Provided by Arizona State University
http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-02-fee ... -bone.html
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top