Posted on 12/20/2007 8:02:48 PM PST by blam
Contact: M. Royhan Gani
rgani@egi.utah.edu
801-585-3539
University of Utah
Evolution tied to Earth movement
Geologists say 'Wall of Africa' allowed humanity to emerge
Nahid and Royhan Gani, geologists at the University of Utah's Energy and Geoscience Institute, stand on the Ethiopian Plateau near the Gorge of the Nile, which was carved by Africa's...
Scientists long have focused on how climate and vegetation allowed human ancestors to evolve in Africa. Now, University of Utah geologists are calling renewed attention to the idea that ground movements formed mountains and valleys, creating environments that favored the emergence of humanity.
Tectonics [movement of Earths crust] was ultimately responsible for the evolution of humankind, Royhan and Nahid Gani of the universitys Energy and Geoscience Institute write in the January, 2008, issue of Geotimes, published by the American Geological Institute.
They argue that the accelerated uplift of mountains and highlands stretching from Ethiopia to South Africa blocked much ocean moisture, converting lush tropical forests into an arid patchwork of woodlands and savannah grasslands that gradually favored human ancestors who came down from the trees and started walking on two feet an energy-efficient way to search larger areas for food in an arid environment.
In their Geotimes article, the Ganis a husband-and-wife research team who met in college in their native Bangladesh describe this 3,700-mile-long stretch of highlands and mountains as the Wall of Africa. It parallels the famed East African Rift valley, where many fossils of human ancestors were found.
Because of the crustal movement or tectonism in East Africa, the landscape drastically changed over the last 7 million years, says Royhan Gani (pronounced rye-hawn Go-knee), a research assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering. That landscape controlled climate on a local to regional scale. That climate change spurred human ancestors to evolve from apes.
Hominins the new scientific word for humans (Homo) and their ancestors (including Ardipithecus, Paranthropus and Australopithecus) split from apes on the evolutionary tree roughly 7 million to 4 million years ago. Royhan Gani says the earliest undisputed hominin was Ardipithecus ramidus 4.4 million years ago. The earliest Homo arose 2.5 million years ago, and our species, Homo sapiens, almost 200,000 years ago.
Tectonics movements of Earths crust, including its ever-shifting tectonic plates and the creation of mountains, valleys and ocean basins has been discussed since at least 1983 as an influence on human evolution.
But Royhan Gani says much previous discussion of how climate affected human evolution involves global climate changes, such as those caused by cyclic changes in Earths orbit around the sun, and not local and regional climate changes caused by East Africas rising landscape.
This map shows the chain of highlands and mountain ranges that University of Utah geologists Royhan and Nahid Gani dub "the Wall of Africa. " Higher elevations are shown in reddish...
A Force from within the Earth
The geological or tectonic forces shaping Africa begin deep in the Earth, where a superplume of hot and molten rock has swelled upward for at least the past 45 million years. This superplume and its branching smaller plumes help push apart the African and Arabian tectonic plates of Earths crust, forming the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and the Great Rift Valley that stretches from Syria to southern Africa.
As part of this process, Africa is being split apart along the East African Rift, a valley bounded by elevated shoulders a few tens of miles wide and sitting atop domes a few hundreds of miles wide and caused by upward bulging of the plume.
The East African Rift runs about 3,700 miles from the Ethiopian Plateau south-southwest to South Africas Karoo Plateau. It is up to 370 miles wide and includes mountains reaching a maximum elevation of about 19,340 feet at Mount Kilimanjaro.
The rift is characterized by volcanic peaks, plateaus, valleys and large basins and freshwater lakes, including sites where many fossils of early humans and their ancestors have been found, says Nahid Gani (pronounced nah-heed go-knee), a research scientist. There was some uplift in East Africa as early as 40 million years ago, but most of these topographic features developed between 7 million and 2 million years ago.
A Wall Rises and New Species Evolve
Although the Wall of Africa started to form around 30 million years ago, recent studies show most of the uplift occurred between 7 million and 2 million years ago, just about when hominins split off from African apes, developed bipedalism and evolved bigger brains, the Ganis write.
Nature built this wall, and then humans could evolve, walk tall and think big, says Royhan Gani. Is there any characteristic feature of the wall that drove human evolution?
The answer, he believes, is the variable landscape and vegetation resulting from uplift of the Wall of Africa, which created a topographic barrier to moisture, mostly from the Indian Ocean and dried the climate. He says that contrary to those who cite global climate cycles, the climate changes in East Africa were local and resulted from the uplift of different parts of the wall at different times.
Rivaling North America's Grand Canyon of the Colorado River, the Gorge of the Nile shown here was formed as the Blue Nile River cut downward into the Ethiopian Plateau. University...
Royhan Gani says the change from forests to a patchwork of woodland and open savannah did not happen everywhere in East Africa at the same time, and the changes also happened in East Africa later than elsewhere in the world.
The Ganis studied the roughly 300-mile-by-300-mile Ethiopian Plateau the most prominent part of the Wall of Africa. Previous research indicated the plateau reached its present average elevation of 8,200 feet 25 million years ago. The Ganis analyzed rates at which the Blue Nile River cut down into the Ethiopian Plateau, creating a canyon that rivals North Americas Grand Canyon. They released those findings in the September 2007 issue of GSA Today, published by the Geological Society of America.
The conclusion: There were periods of low-to-moderate incision and uplift between 29 million and 10 million years ago, and again between 10 million and 6 million years ago, but the most rapid uplift of the Ethiopian Plateau (by some 3,200 vertical feet) happened 6 million to 3 million years ago.
The Geotimes paper says other research has shown the Kenyan part of the wall rose mostly between 7 million and 2 million years ago, mountains in Tanganyika and Malawi were uplifted mainly between 5 million and 2 million years ago, and the walls southernmost end gained most of its elevation during the past 5 million years.
Clearly, the Wall of Africa grew to be a prominent elevated feature over the last 7 million years, thereby playing a prominent role in East African aridification by wringing moisture out of monsoonal air moving across the region, the Ganis write. That period coincides with evolution of human ancestors in the area.
Royhan Gani says the earliest undisputed evidence of true bipedalism (as opposed to knuckle-dragging by apes) is 4.1 million years ago in Australopithecus anamensis, but some believe the trait existed as early as 6 million to 7 million years ago.
The Ganis speculate that the shaping of varied landscapes by tectonic forces lake basins, valleys, mountains, grasslands, woodlands could also be responsible, at a later stage, for hominins developing a bigger brain as a way to cope with these extremely variable and changing landscapes in which they had to find food and survive predators.
For now, Royhan Gani acknowledges the lack of more precise timeframes makes it difficult to link specific tectonic events to the development of upright walking, bigger brains and other key steps in human evolution.
But it all happened within the right time period, he says. Now we need to nail it down.
Cool!
YEC INTREP
I ran across another claim a few years ago that the evolution of humans was due to the rise of Panama filling in what had been a gap between North and South America, blocking off an ocean current that had flowed through the gap, and thus changing the climate of Africa to favor human development.
Human Ancestors Went Out Of Africa And Then Came Back... [1998]
ScienceDaily | Friday, August 7, 1998 | adapted from New York University materials
Posted on 12/17/2007 8:37:11 PM EST by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1940963/posts
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Thanks Blam. |
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Mexican Newspaper Banners “US Border Will Become Thin In Some Places”
(BORDER SELLOUT) [Translation]
El Diario Newspaper (Juarez, Mexico) in Spanish | 20 December 2007 | El Diario News (Mexico)
Posted on 12/20/2007 7:18:55 AM EST by AmericanInTokyo
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1942185/posts
Origin Of Bipedalism Closely Tied To Environmental Changes
Space Daily | 05-01-2002 | staff writer at Space Daily
Posted on 05/29/2002 5:11:46 PM EDT by Salman
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/691468/posts
[snip] The hypothesis they found the most support for regarding the origin of bipedalism is the one that says our ancestors began walking upright largely in response to environmental changes - in particular, to the growing incidence of open spaces and the way that changed the distribution of food. In response to periods of cooling and drying, which thinned out dense forests and produced “mosaics” of forests, woodlands and grasslands, it seems likely that “some apes maintained a forest-oriented adaptation, while others may have begun to exploit forest margins and grassy woodlands,” said paleoanthropologist Brian Richmond, lead author in the new study. [end]
(regarding Elaine Morgan)
12 posted on 05/29/2002 5:37:25 PM EDT by Maceman
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/691468/posts?page=12#12
23 posted on 05/30/2002 8:41:27 AM EDT by Maceman
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/691468/posts?page=23#23
36 posted on 05/30/2002 11:38:19 AM EDT by Maceman
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/691468/posts?page=36#36
That sounds familiar to me too.
More from the “Hopeful Monster” hypothesis (not yet a theory).
“Discover” magazine?
You know, this is pretty interesting. I had never thought of a tie-in between geology and man’s ancestry and descent from the animal kingdom.
To learn a scientific fact on FR is why I keep coming back!
Hmmm. I clicked on your name and you’re banned. What happened?
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