Posted on 08/08/2007 3:50:18 PM PDT by blam
Kenyan Fossils May Add New Branch to Human Family Tree
John Roach
for National Geographic News
August 8, 2007
A pair of fossils recently discovered in Kenya is challenging the straight-line story of human evolution.
Traditional evolutionary theories of the genus Homo suggest a successive progression: Homo habilis gave rise to Homo erectus, which then begat modern humans, Homo sapiens.
H. erectus is commonly seen as the most similar ancestor to modern humans, differing mostly by having a brain about three-quarters the size.
But the newly found upper jawbone and skull, which come from two separate skeletons, suggest that H. habilis was not a direct ancestor of modern humans and that H. erectus was less modern than previously thought.
The fossils, described today in the science journal Nature, were discovered by the Koobi Fora Research Projectan international group of scientists led by the mother-daughter team of Meave and Louise Leakey and affiliated with the National Museums of Kenya.
(Meave and Louise Leakey are National Geographic Society Explorers-in-Residence. National Geographic News is part of the National Geographic Society, which also funded this research.)
Fossil Contemporaries
The jawbone is attributed to H. habilis and was dated to 1.44 million years agomeaning its far younger than previously known H. habilis fossils and dates to well after the emergence of H. erectus.
The finding indicates the two species lived side-by-side for half a million years in eastern Africa, according to study lead author Fred Spoor, a professor of evolutionary anatomy at University College London.
"I'm very cautious saying this, [but] it has the potential to remove Homo habilis from the direct ancestral line to us modern humans," he said.
Instead, H. habilis and H. erectus may have had a sister relationship that originated sometime between two and three million years ago,
(Excerpt) Read more at news.nationalgeographic.com ...
GGG Ping.
Do the scientists have any explanation yet as to why leftists never evolved past the baboon stage?
Ping
If the two species lived side by side, where did the
progression come from? From which group? What
“environmental” stress would allow one group to
survive and propagate, and the other to fade away?
One would suppose they had similar environments, and
there would be equal chance for both groups to survive
or die.
Could a habilis mate with a erectus? would the offspring
be more “advanced” or less “advanced”..?
MORE evidence Evo types have NO CLUE what they are talking about!
Here’s a more scientific explanation (YouBoob video).
MTG46: The Way of Taiji FIghting & Healing: Erle Montaigue
(or Erle tells us how to use the C-back to get in touch with our reptile brains—LOL!)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uo_cHXifRk4
We need a Rage Boy picture!
YEC INTREP
Also, from the Talking Heads we learn:
Things fall apart, it's scientific.
May the branch of humanity with the best looking females prevail...
There is little doubt that erectus could mate with just about anything. LOL
The two groups should have been able to interbreed for a while after the split, and before the differences grew too large.
No idea how long "a while" might be, but it would most likely be measured in tens of thousands of years.
But there may have been a geographical separation responsible for the early split? In which case the two groups may not have been able to interbreed for that reason.
This is all new ground, following these recent discoveries, so there are a lot of questions still to be answered. For me that's most of the fun of studying evolution!
Yikes! The Piltdown man is alive and.....well??
However, he was told if it lasted more than four hours he should call his doctor.
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DaveLR started an earlier one, I just got to the bottom of my comments screen.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1878232/posts
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