Posted on 08/11/2002 3:59:04 PM PDT by vannrox
August 6, 2002Skulls Found in Africa and in Europe Challenge Theories of Human OriginsBy JOHN NOBLE WILFORDwo ancient skulls, one from central Africa and the other from the Black Sea republic of Georgia, have shaken the human family tree to its roots, sending scientists scrambling to see if their favorite theories are among the fallen fruit. Probably so, according to paleontologists, who may have to make major revisions in the human genealogy and rethink some of their ideas about the first migrations out of Africa by human relatives. Yet, despite all the confusion and uncertainty the skulls have caused, scientists speak in superlatives of their potential for revealing crucial insights in the evidence-disadvantaged field of human evolution. The African skull dates from nearly 7 million years ago, close to the fateful moment when the human and chimpanzee lineages went their separate ways. The 1.75-million-year-old Georgian skull could answer questions about the first human ancestors to leave Africa, and why they ventured forth. Still, it was a shock, something of a one-two punch, for two such momentous discoveries to be reported independently in a single week, as happened in July. "I can't think of another month in the history of paleontology in which two such finds of importance were published," said Dr. Bernard Wood, a paleontologist at George Washington University. "This really exposes how little we know of human evolution and the origin of our own genus Homo." Every decade or two, a fossil discovery upsets conventional wisdom. One more possible "missing link" emerges. An even older member of the hominid group, those human ancestors and their close relatives (but not apes), comes to light. Some fossils also show up with attributes so puzzling that scientists cannot decide where they belong, if at all, in the human lineage. At each turn, the family tree, once drawn straight as a ponderosa pine, has had to be reconfigured with more branches leading here and there and, in some cases, apparently nowhere. "When I went to medical school in 1963, human evolution looked like a ladder," Dr. Wood said. The ladder, he explained, stepped from monkey to modern human through a progression of intermediates, each slightly less apelike than the previous one. But the fact that modern Homo sapiens is the only hominid living today is quite misleading, an exception to the rule dating only since the demise of Neanderthals some 30,000 years ago. Fossil hunters keep finding multiple species of hominids that overlapped in time, reflecting evolutionary diversity in response to new or changed circumstances. Not all of them could be direct ancestors of Homo sapiens. Some presumably were dead-end side branches. So a tangled bush has now replaced a tree as the ascendant imagery of human evolution. Most scientists studying the newfound African skull think it lends strong support to hominid bushiness almost from the beginning. That is one of several reasons Dr. Daniel E. Lieberman, a biological anthropologist at Harvard, called the African specimen "one of the greatest paleontological discoveries of the past 100 years." The skull was uncovered in the desert of Chad by a French-led team under the direction of Dr. Michel Brunet of the University of Poitiers. Struck by the skull's unusual mix of apelike and evolved hominid features, the discoverers assigned it to an entirely new genus and species Sahelanthropus tchadensis. It is more commonly called Toumai, meaning "hope of life" in the local language. In announcing the discovery in the July 11 issue of the journal Nature, Dr. Brunet's group said the fossils a cranium, two lower jaw fragments and several teeth promised "to illuminate the earliest chapter in human evolutionary history." The age, face and geography of the new specimen were all surprises. About a million years older than any previously recognized hominid, Toumai lived close to the time that molecular biologists think was the earliest period in which the human lineage diverged from the chimpanzee branch. The next oldest hominid appears to be the 6-million-year-old Orrorin tugenensis, found two years ago in Kenya but not yet fully accepted by many scientists. After it is Ardipithecus ramidus, which probably lived 4.4 million to 5.8 million years ago in Ethiopia. "A lot of interesting things were happening earlier than we previously knew," said Dr. Eric Delson, a paleontologist at the City University of New York and the American Museum of Natural History. The most puzzling aspect of the new skull is that it seems to belong to two widely separated evolutionary periods. Its size indicates that Toumai had a brain comparable to that of a modern chimp, about 320 to 380 cubic centimeters. Yet the face is short and relatively flat, compared with the protruding faces of chimps and other early hominids. Indeed, it is more humanlike than the "Lucy" species, Australopithecus afarensis, which lived more than 3.2 million years ago. "A hominid of this age," Dr. Wood wrote in Nature, "should certainly not have the face of a hominid less than one-third of its geological age." Scientists suggest several possible explanations. Toumai could somehow be an ancestor of modern humans, or of gorillas or chimps. It could be a common ancestor of humans and chimps, before the divergence. "But why restrict yourself to thinking this fossil has to belong to a lineage that leads to something modern?" Dr. Wood asked. "It's perfectly possible this belongs to a branch that's neither chimp nor human, but has become extinct." Dr. Wood said the "lesson of history" is that fossil hunters are more likely to find something unrelated directly to living creatures more side branches to tangle the evolutionary bush. So the picture of human genealogy gets more complex, not simpler. A few scientists sound cautionary notes. Dr. Delson questioned whether the Toumai face was complete enough to justify interpretations of more highly evolved characteristics. One critic argued that the skull belonged to a gorilla, but that is disputed by scientists who have examined it. Just as important perhaps is the fact that the Chad skull was found off the beaten path of hominid research. Until now, nearly every early hominid fossil has come from eastern Africa, mainly Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania, or from southern Africa. Finding something very old and different in central Africa should expand the hunt. "In hindsight, we should have expected this," Dr. Lieberman said. "Africa is big and we weren't looking at all of Africa. This fossil is a wake-up call. It reminds us that we're missing large portions of the fossil record." Although overshadowed by the news of Toumai, the well-preserved 1.75-million-year-old skull from Georgia was also full of surprises, in this case concerning a later chapter in the hominid story. It raised questions about the identity of the first hominids to be intercontinental travelers, who set in motion the migrations that would eventually lead to human occupation of the entire planet. The discovery, reported in the July 5 issue of the journal Science, was made at the medieval town Dmanisi, 50 miles southwest of Tbilisi, the Georgian capital. Two years ago, scientists announced finding two other skulls at the same site, but the new one appears to be intriguingly different and a challenge to prevailing views. Scientists have long been thought that the first hominid out-of-Africa migrants were Homo erectus, a species with large brains and a stature approaching human dimensions. The species was widely assumed to have stepped out in the world once they evolved their greater intelligence and longer legs and invented more advanced stone tools. The first two Dmanisi skulls confirmed one part of the hypothesis. They bore a striking resemblance to the African version of H. erectus, sometimes called Homo ergaster. Their discovery was hailed as the most ancient undisputed hominid fossils outside Africa. But the skulls were associated with more than 1,000 crudely chipped cobbles, simple choppers and scrapers, not the more finely shaped and versatile tools that would be introduced by H. erectus more than 100,000 years later. That undercut the accepted evolutionary explanation for the migrations. The issue has become even more muddled with the discovery of the third skull by international paleontologists led by Dr. David Lordkipanidze of the Georgian State Museum in Tbilisi. It is about the same age and bears an overall resemblance to the other two skulls. But it is much smaller. "These hominids are more primitive than we thought," Dr. Lordkipanidze said in an article in the current issue of National Geographic magazine. "We have a new puzzle." To the discoverers, the skull has the canine teeth and face of Homo habilis, a small hominid with long apelike arms that evolved in Africa before H. erectus. And the size of its cranium suggests a substantially smaller brain than expected for H. erectus. In their journal report, the discovery team estimated the cranial capacity of the new skull to be about 600 cubic centimeters, compared with about 780 and 650 c.c.'s for the other Dmanisis specimens. That is "near the mean" for H. habilis, they noted. Modern human braincases are about 1,400 cubic centimeters. Dr. G. Philip Rightmire, a paleontologist at the State University of New York at Binghamton and a member of the discovery team, said that if the new skull had been found before the other two, it might have been identified as H. habilis. Dr. Ian Tattersall, a specialist in human evolution at the natural history museum in New York City, said the specimen was "the first truly African-looking thing to come from outside Africa." More than anything else, he said, it resembles a 1.9-million-year-old Homo habilis skull from Kenya. For the time being, however, the fossil is tentatively labeled Homo erectus, though it stretches the definition of that species. Scientists are pondering what lessons they can learn from it about the diversity of physical attributes within a single species. Dr. Fred Smith, a paleontologist who has just become dean of arts and sciences at Loyola University in Chicago, agreed that his was a sensible approach, at least until more fossils turn up. Like other scientists, he doubted that two separate hominid species would have occupied the same habitat at roughly the same time. Marked variations within a species are not uncommon; brain size varies within living humans by abut 15 percent. "The possibility of variations within a species should never be excluded," Dr. Smith said. "There's a tendency now for everybody to see three bumps on a fossil instead of two and immediately declare that to be another species." Some discoverers of the Dmanisi skull speculated that these hominids might be descended from ancestors like H. habilis that had already left Africa. In that case, it could be argued that H. erectus itself evolved not in Africa but elsewhere from an ex-African species. If so, the early Homo genealogy would have to be drastically revised. But it takes more than two or even three specimens to reach firm conclusions about the range of variations within a species. Still, Georgia is a good place to start. The three specimens found there represent the largest collection of individuals from any single site older than around 800,000 years. "We have now a very rich collection, of three skulls and three jawbones, which gives us a chance to study very properly this question" of how to classify early hominids, Dr. Lordkipanidze said, and paleontologists are busy this summer looking for more skulls at Dmanisi. "We badly want to know what the functional abilities of the first out-of-Africa migrants were," said Dr. Wood of George Washington University. "What could that animal do that animals that preceded it couldn't? What was the role of culture in this migration? Maybe other animals were leaving and the hominids simply followed." All scholars of human prehistory eagerly await the next finds from Dmanisi, and in Chad. Perhaps they will help untangle some of the bushy branches of the human family tree to reveal the true ancestry of Homo sapiens.
|
She did so here at the end of that "Let it all hang" thread that wound up being locked.
I called you an "old man". I apologize. Would I push the abuse button today? No. That would make my reaction of long ago an over-reaction today. I apologize.Medved's continued flaunting of that earlier post (from the same thread) merely shows the poverty of his position. BTW, his own moral outrage is a late invention:923 posted on 4/7/02 10:31 PM Eastern by Nebullis
Pardon the dumb question, but how do you "grope" somebody via electronic media? Is that kind of like the scene in "Keystone Hotel" where the pie goes through the phone line and sploowies the police chief from out the receiver?842 posted on 4/7/02 7:25 PM Eastern by medved
And this invalidates the theory of evolution in which way?
History changes with human convenience, don't you know. It would be awful if we came from apes. It might even make us totally lawless if we knew. Therefore, we didn't.
When your best friend is a bat, it's a little hard to gin up any human empathy.
...and Giordano Bruno is the most famous martyr in the history of science.
Bruno, the Dominican, the philosopher, the most famous martyr in the history of science? I didn't know that!
He defended science, it is true. But he wasn't all that knowledgable on whatever science subjects he wrote.
Best known perhaps for his (at the time) heretical view that the universe was infinite, Bruno not only outraged the Church, but invariably alienated his benefactors with a mouth that never seemed to have learned the fine art of knowing when to shut up.
A smart man, possessed of a rather extraordinary memory, Bruno authored about 20 books, and thus could rightly claim to be an important part of the Italian Rennaisance. As one who was constantly excited by new ideas, he actively embraced many, if not most, of the new ideas in science of his day, even if he didn't fully understand them.
Although his passing, and the events leading up to it, are noteworthy examples of the intellectual ferment and questing for new ideas that was the Rennaisance, calling him the scientific equivalent of Moses is a real stretch, one I've never heard before.
It's worth noting, too, that his contemporaries (who really were scientists), Kepler and Galileo, didn't think all that much of him.
Those who have a distaste for all things religious will doubtless have a Romantic view of this "most famous martyr in the history of science", but viewed a little less dispassionately, one is forced to conclude...Moses he ain't.
CA....
heh heh ...he said "Homo".....heh heh heh
Are we in agreement that evil exists and that Stalin embraced it?
If you believe that good and evil exist, that right and wrong are absolutes, and that the spiritual is ultimately far more important than the material; you will be suspicious of ideas which lead to evil.
But I agree, that Stalin's deeds don't invalidate the science of Darwin. It is a huge warning, however, that we should not use science as a basis for morality or put scientific thinking above moral thinking.
Can you come up with an idea that cannot possibly in any way, no matter how its twisted, ever lead to evil?
But I agree, that Stalin's deeds don't invalidate the science of Darwin. It is a huge warning, however, that we should not use science as a basis for morality or put scientific thinking above moral thinking.
Would an example of some loon (or group thereof), using religion for evil ends convince you that we should not use religion as a basis for morality or put religious thinking above moral thinking?
Posted by Junior, in post 186: "I find this comment* interesting for a number of reasons. First, there is an implicit racist statement: "stupidest white man" -- not "stupidest man." Secondly, there is the ad hominem: not only is Darwin stupid, but Gould and Eldredge are "feebs." Thirdly, there is absolutely nothing of substance in this posting at all. It is simply name calling. And this coming from a man who believes: Earth orbited Saturn closely without being torn apart by tidal forces, frozen and irradiated; the Grand Canyon was formed by a lightning bolt despite the lack of fulgarites; that dinosaurs lived only a few thousand years ago despite lack of paleontological evidence; and that humans are the result of genetic engineering on the part of a person or persons unknown. Methinks this is a case of the pot calling the kettle black.
The "comment*", in question, which is yours medved, which you do seem to repeat many times:
For the lowdown on Chuck Darwin, stupidest white man of all time and his BS theory, and on the continuing efforts of feebs like Steve Gould and Niles Eldredge to keep the charade going for another generation:
My question to you medved is this: Do you really believe the Earth orbited Saturn at one time? Or that humans are the result of genetic engineering? Or that the Grand Canyon is the result of lightning strike(s)?
I'm really just curious right now more than anything. I can see you have your hands full debating others, so, just simple yes or no answers will suffice, thanks.
There are FReepers who seem to think that the thought of evolution or the ideology of science leads to murder -- and have presented comparative body counts to prove that athiests are -- because of their beliefs -- morally superior to theists.I am not impressed by comparative body counts. I am deeply disturbed by people who want me to believe in the absense of evidence, even in the presence of counterevidence. The notion that belief in itself is good is a steppingstone for tyrants.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.