Scientific News Hypotheses Historical hypotheses ETHIOPIAN FOSSIL SKULL INDICATES HOMO ERECTUS WAS SINGLE, WIDESPREAD SPECIES 1 MILLION YEARS AGO
ETHIOPIAN
FOSSIL SKULL INDICATES HOMO ERECTUS WAS SINGLE, WIDESPREAD SPECIES 1 MILLION
YEARS AGO
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Berkeley
- A million-year-old Homo erectus skull found in Ethiopia indicates that this
human ancestor was a single species scattered widely throughout Asia, Europe and
Africa, not two separate species, according to an international group of
scientists who discovered the skull in 1997.
Some
archaeologists and anthropologists have argued that African and European
populations were a different species, Homo ergaster, distinct from the strictly
Asian Homo erectus.
It
took University of California, Berkeley, researchers and their colleagues more
than two years to clean and reassemble the crushed skull, which is described by
the Ethiopian and American team in the March 21 issue of Nature. The fossil was
described by Berhane Asfaw of the Rift Valley Research Service in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, paleoanthropologist Tim D. White, professor of integrative biology and
co-director of UC Berkeley's Laboratory for Human Evolutionary Studies, and UC
Berkeley graduate student W. Henry Gilbert, who found the skull.
"This
fossil is a crucial piece of evidence showing that the splitting of Homo erectus
into two species is not justified," said White. "This African fossil
is so similar to its Asian contemporaries that it's clear Homo erectus was a
truly successful, widespread species throughout the Old World."
The
Ethiopian and American scientists also conclude in their paper that the onset of
the Ice Ages about 950,000 years ago likely split the Homo erectus populations
and led to their divergent evolution. The African population of Homo erectus
probably gave rise to modern Homo sapiens, the European branch perhaps became
the Neandertals, or Homo neanderthalensis, while the Asian population went
extinct.
Homo
erectus first appeared about 1.8 million years ago and, based on the fossil
evidence, quickly populated Africa, Asia and Europe. Though it is unclear
whether the species arose in Africa or Asia, a million years later the
widespread populations were still similar enough to be considered a single
species, White argued. The largest number of Homo erectus specimens are from
Asia, including the first specimen - "Java Man."
"What
we are saying in this paper is that the anthropological splitting common today
is giving the wrong impression about the biology of these early human ancestors,"
he said. "The different names indicate an apparent diversity that is not
real. Homo erectus is a biologically successful organism, not a whole series of
different human ancestors, all but one of which went extinct."
By
the time Homo erectus disappeared some 400,000 years ago, its various
populations had clearly diverged, since 500,000-year-old fossils from Asia,
including "Peking Man," differ significantly from African fossils of
the same age, particularly in the size of the cranium.
The
new Homo erectus fossils were discovered in the Middle Awash region of the Afar
Rift in eastern Ethiopia, which has been the source of many fossil human
ancestors, ranging from half a million years old to more than 6 million years
old. First targeted as a study site by French geologist Maurice Taieb in the
1960s, the Middle Awash has been explored since 1981 by a team assembled by the
late UC Berkeley anthropologist J. Desmond Clark, to whom the paper is dedicated.
It has yielded a nearly continuous record of human occupation that dramatically
demonstrates the evolution of modern humans from ape-like ancestors.
"In
the Middle Awash, we see a chain of ancestors that is powerful evidence for
evolution," White said. "As we step back in time, we see more and more
primitive technology and anatomy, all the way back to six million years ago,
where we see almost the anatomy of an ape."
Before
his death last month, Clark published an extensive monograph on the primitive
stone tools, including hand axes and cleavers, found around the village of Bouri
in the Middle Awash and used by the Homo erectus population associated with the
new fossil finds.
Gilbert
first noticed the skull or calvaria, which is missing the lower face and teeth,
during a survey near Bouri on Dec. 27, 1997, while scouring the ground in
110-degree midday heat.
"It
was pretty breathtaking," Gilbert said. "I got lucky."
Though
crushed, the skull was not fragmented and scattered as many fossil skulls are.
White and Gilbert excavated the rock encasing the skull and transported it back
to Addis Ababa, where the UC Berkeley team spent two years extracting it from
the encrusting rock matrix.
White
was disappointed to find that the lower face was gone. Because of peculiar
scratches on the skull, he thinks the individual may have been killed by a large
lion or hyena, which probably ate the face and gnawed on the skull in an attempt
to extract the brain.
Despite
the lack of the lower part of the skull and the teeth, the calvaria displayed
obvious characteristics of Homo erectus: a shallow forehead sloping back from
massive brow ridges, and an elongated, less spherical brain case. Asfaw, White
and Gilbert compared the specific size and shape of these features to those of
other Homo erectus fossils and found them to share characteristics with
contemporary Homo erectus fossils from Asia and Africa.
"Before
this time, we really haven't had a good comparison between African and Asian
forms from the same time window," Gilbert said. "We've had early
African forms and late Asian forms, and people have used the differences between
them to generalize about all African and Asian specimens. Now that we have a
later African form for comparison, we are finding that they are very similar in
a lot of the features that people were formerly using to separate early African
from late Asian ones.
"One
of the biggest impacts this calvaria will have on the field is making Homo
erectus look more like a single species again."
Six
other Homo erectus fossils, apparently from separate individuals, also were
found in the area, including three thighbones (femurs) and a shin bone (tibia).
All were from the same sedimentary layer, the Dakanihylo or "Daka"
member of the Bouri formation, which is dated at 1 million years ago.
Gilbert's
primary interest and the subject of his thesis is the diverse fauna of the site,
which included numerous species of pigs, bovids similar to the wildebeest or gnu,
several types of elephants, hippos, a giant hyena and a large cat.
"The
fauna there a million years ago was in many ways very similar to a modern
African fauna," he said. "This is actually the first site in East
Africa with an extremely high diversity of alcelaphine bovids, antelope adapted
to grazing and broad expanses of savanna. What we think this means is, we are
dealing with an open, more savanna-like environment."
###
Other
co-authors of the Nature paper are Yonas Beyene of the Ethiopian Ministry of
Information and Culture, who was involved with the archaeological field work at
the site; Elizabeth Vrba of the Department of Geology and Geophysics at Yale
University, who described many of the bovids from the site; and geologists
William K. Hart of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, Paul R. Renne of the
Berkeley Geochronology Laboratory and UC Berkeley's Department of Earth and
Planetary Science, and Giday WoldeGabriel of Los Alamos National Laboratory, who
together worked on the field and laboratory geological investigations of the
million-years-old sedimentary rocks.
The
work was supported primarily by the National Science Foundation, with additional
funds from the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at Los Alamos
National Laboratory and the Department of Geology at Miami University.
Contact:
Robert
Sanders, rls@pa.urel.berkeley.edu,
510-643-6998, University
of California - Berkeley
Source
of the given news and the copyrights belong to a
University
of California - Berkeley
Publishing date: March 26, 2002
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