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Closest Human Ancestor May Rewrite Steps in Our Evolution (1 Viewer)

St. Louis Bob

Footballguy
A startling mix of human and primitive traits found in the brains, hips, feet and hands of an extinct species identified last year make a strong case for it being the immediate ancestor to the human lineage, scientists have announced.

These new findings could rewrite long-standing theories about the precise steps human evolution took, they added, including the notion that early human female hips changed shape to accommodate larger-brained offspring. There is also new evidence suggesting that this species had the hands of a toolmaker.

Fossils of the extinct hominid known as Australopithecus sediba were accidentally discovered by the 9-year-old son of a scientist in the remains of a cave in South Africa in 2008, findings detailed by researchers last year. Australopithecus means "southern ape," and is a group that includes the iconic fossil Lucy, while sediba means "wellspring" in the South African language Sotho. [see images of human ancestor]

Two key specimens were discovered — a juvenile male as developed as a 10- to 13-year-old human and an adult female maybe in her late 20s or early 30s. The species is both a hominid and a hominin — hominids include humans, chimpanzees, gorillas and their extinct ancestors, while hominins include those species after Homo, the human lineage, split from that of chimpanzees.

To begin to see where Au. sediba might fit on the family tree, researchers pinned down the age of the fossils by dating the calcified sediments surrounding them with advanced uranium-lead dating techniques and a method called paleomagnetic dating, which measures how many times the Earth's magnetic field has reversed. They discovered the fossils were approximately 1.977 million years old, which predates the earliest appearances of traits specific to the human lineage Homo in the fossil record. This places Au. sediba in roughly the same age category as hominids such as Homo habilis and Homo rudolfensis, which were thought to be potential ancestors to Homo erectus, the earliest undisputed predecessor of modern humans. [10 Things That Make Humans Special]

"As the fossil record for early human ancestors increases, the need for more accurate dates is becoming paramount," said researcher Robyn Pickering at the University of Melbourne in Australia.

Small but humanlike brain

Most aspects of Au. sediba display an intriguing mix of both human and more primitive features that hint it might be an intermediary form between Australopithecus and Homo.

"The fossils demonstrate a surprisingly advanced but small brain, a very evolved hand with a long thumb like a human's, a very modern pelvis, but a foot and ankle shape never seen in any hominin species that combines features of both apes and humans in one anatomical package," said researcher Lee Berger, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. "The many very advanced features found in the brain and body and the earlier date make it possibly the best candidate ancestor for our genus, the genus Homo, more so than previous discoveries such as Homo habilis."

The brain is often thought of as what distinguishes humanity from the rest of the animal kingdom, and the juvenile specimen of Au. sediba had an exceptionally well-preserved skull that could shed light on the pace of brain evolution in early hominins. To find out more, the researchers scanned the space in the skull where its brain would have been using the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France; the result is the most accurate scan ever produced for an early human ancestor, with a level of detail of up to 90 microns, or just below the size of a human hair.

The scan revealed Au. sediba had a much smaller brain than seen in human species, with an adult version maybe only as large as a medium-size grapefruit. However, it was humanlike in several ways — for instance, its orbitofrontal region directly behind the eyes apparently expanded in ways that make it more like a human's frontal lobe in shape. This area is linked in humans with higher mental functions such as multitasking, an ability that may contribute to human capacities for long-term planning and innovative behavior.

"We could be seeing the beginnings of those capabilities," researcher Kristian Carlson at the University of Witwatersrand told LiveScience.

These new findings cast doubt on the long-standing theory that brains gradually increased in size and complexity from Australopithecus to Homo. Instead, their findings corroborate an alternative idea — that Australopithecus brains did increase in complexity gradually, becoming more like Homo, and later increased in size relatively quickly.

Modern hips

This mosaic of modern and primitive traits held true with its hips as well. An analysis of the partial pelvis of the female Au. sediba revealed that it had modern, humanlike features.

"It is surprising to discover such an advanced pelvis in such a small-brained creature," said researcher Job Kibii at the University of the Witwatersrand. "It is short and broad like a human pelvis ... parts of the pelvis are indistinguishable from that of humans."

Scientists had thought the human-like pelvis evolved to accommodate larger-brained offspring. The new findings of humanlike hips in Au. sediba despite small-brained offspring suggests these pelvises may have instead initially evolved to help this hominin better wander across the landscape, perhaps as grasslands began to expand across its habitat.

When it came to walking, investigating the feet and ankles of the fossils revealed surprises about how Au. sediba might have strode across the world. No hominin ankle has ever been described with so many primitive and advanced features.

"If the bones had not been found stuck together, the team may have described them as belonging to different species," said researcher Bernhard Zipfel at the University of the Witwatersrand.

The researchers discovered that its ankle joint is mostly like a human's, with some evidence for a humanlike arch and a well--efined Achilles tendon, but its heel and shin bones appear to be mostly ape-like. This suggested the hominid probably climbed trees yet also halkid in a unique way not exactly like that of humans.

Altogether, such anatomical traits would have allowed Au. sediba to walk in perhaps a more energy-efficient way, with tendons storing energy and returning that energy to the next step, said researcher Steve Churchill from Duke University in Durham, N.C. "These are the kinds of things that we see with the genus Homo," he explained.

What nice hands …

Finally, an analysis of Au. sediba's hands suggests it might have been a toolmaker. The fossils — including the most complete hand known in an early hominin, which is missing only a few bones and belonged to the mature female specimen — showed its hand was capable of the strong grasping needed for tree-climbing, but that it also had a long thumb and short fingers. These would have allowed it a precision grip useful for tools, one involving just the thumb and fingers, where the palm does not play an active part.

Altogether, the hand of Au. sediba has more features related to tool-making than that of the first human species thought of as a tool user, the "handy man" Homo habilis, said researcher Tracy Kivell at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany. "This suggests to us that sediba may also have been a toolmaker."

Though the scientists haven't excavated the site in search of stone tools, "the hand and brain morphology suggest that Au. sediba may have had the capacity to manufacture and use complex tools," Kivell added.

The researchers do caution that although they suggest that Au. sediba was ancestral to the human lineage, all these apparent resemblances between it and us could just be coincidences, with this extinct species evolving similar traits to our lineages due, perhaps, to similar circumstances. [Top 10 Missing Links]

In fact, it might be just as interesting to imagine that Au. sediba was not directly ancestral to Homo, because it opens up the possibility "of independent evolution of the same sorts of features," Carlson said. "Whether or not it's on the same lineage as leading to Homo, I think there are interesting questions and implications."

The scientists detailed their findings in the Sept. 9 issue of the journal Science.
link

Very cool stuff.

 
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Fossils of the extinct hominid known as Australopithecus sediba were accidentally discovered by the 9-year-old son of a scientist in the remains of a cave in South Africa in 2008, findings detailed by researchers last year. Australopithecus means "southern ape," and is a group that includes the iconic fossil Lucy, while sediba means "wellspring" in the South African language Sotho.
My link

 
Does anyone know where Bachmann stands on this? I need to know before I reach a conclusion.

 
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Title changed.

I'm actually not a religious basher as I'm firmly in the "WTF knows?" camp. I want to :headexplode: though when I read stuff about the Devil planting dinosaur bones in the earth to fool people and just couldn't resist.

Please, carry on.

 
About everything we thought about early man has been found wrong recently.

1. Homo erectus and modern humans interbred. "We found evidence for hybridization between modern humans and archaic forms in Africa,... “It looks like our lineage has always exchanged genes with their more morphologically diverged neighbors.”



2. Neanderthals promoted to fully human status: “On the western fringes of Siberia, the Stone Age Denisova cave has surrendered precious treasure: a toe bone that could shed light on early humans’ promiscuous relations with their hominin cousins.”



Out of time but there is more.

 
Oldest human remains outside of Africa found in Israel"Anatomically modern humans arrived from Africa and created a melting pot of evolution," said anthropologist Israel Hershkovitz.


Professor Israel Hershkovitz of Tel Aviv University stands by a Homo sapien skull, left, a recently discovered 55,000-year-old human skull and a Neanderthal skull, right, at a press event outside the Manot Cave in the Western Galilee, Israel, on Jan. 28. A team of researchers from Tel Aviv University, Ben-Gurion University and the Israel Antiquities Authority say the 55,000-year-old skull is one of the most important discoveries in the study of human evolution. The rare skull constitutes the earliest fossilized evidence outside of Africa indicating that today's human population originated in Africa. The partial ancient skull offers clues to the first modern Europeans, as researchers suggest the population from which the skull is derived had recently migrated out of Africa and established itself in the Levantine before moving to Europe.

TEL AVIV, Israel, Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Researchers say they've found evidence of modern man's exodus out of Africa. Scientists say a newly unearthed skull in Israel is roughly 55,000 years old. It is the earliest evidence of Homo sapiens outside of Africa, and proof that modern man set up shop in Middle East before colonizing the European continent.

"It's amazing," lead study author Israel Hershkovitz, an anthropologist at Tel Aviv University, told the Guardian. "This is the first specimen we have that connects Africa to Europe."

The fossil consists of only the top part of the skull; the face and jaw are missing. It was discovered in the Manot cave in northern Israel.

"It's the earliest evidence of anatomically modern humans outside of Africa," Omry Barzilai, one of the dig site's leaders and the head of the prehistory branch at the Israel Antiquities Authority, told Haaretz. "It supports the theory that modern humans left Africa around 60,000 years ago through this region."

The discovery confirms what archaeologists and prehistorians had long hypothesized. Now researchers have solid evidence linking fossils in Africa and Europe, validating genetic testing that showed most of modern man's DNA originated with a group of East Africans -- a group that (with the help of their offspring) went on to to colonize the globe.

Those same genetic studies also posited that Homo sapiens and Neanderthals interbred somewhere in the Middle East before groups of modern man split off and went on to settle Europe and Asia. The new skull confirms that modern and ancient man once lived side by side -- and even laid down with each other.

"Neanderthals were flourishing here 50,000 to 60,000 years ago," Hershkovitz said. "Then, anatomically modern humans arrived from Africa and created a melting pot of evolution."

The new study was published this week in the journal Nature.
http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2015/01/28/Oldest-human-remains-outside-of-Africa-found-in-Israel/3541422471737/#ixzz3QDTmI1oF

 
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Jawbone found by fisherman may belong to unclassified humanThe jawbone is the first evidence of ancient man uncovered in Taiwan.

Penghu 1 was recovered from the seafloor off the coast of Taiwan.TAIPEI, Taiwan, Jan. 28 (UPI) -- That ape begat early man and early man begat modern is relatively clear. But the confused evolutionary transition from early to modern man is littered with abandoned lineages, species and groups of early humans long extinct -- Neanderthals, Denisovans, Homo erectus, Homo floresiensis.

That list of early human relatives may soon grow, thanks to a new fossil discovered off the coast of Taiwan. Researchers say the jawbone, scooped up off the ocean floor by the net of a local fisherman, could belong to an unidentified species of primitive human.

Researchers say the fossil belonged to an early human who lived somewhere between 10,000 and 190,000 years ago. Because the jawbone is more robust than the H. erectus jawbones found in Java and Northern China, researchers have floated the possibility that the newly analyzed fossil belonged to an ancient hominin species that predates modern man's arrival in Asia.

Scientists say the fossil, dubbed Penghu 1, is similar to a 400,000-year-old jawbone discovered a few years ago in Southern China, roughly 600 miles north of Taiwan.

Still, researchers aren't prepared to make any definitive judgement as to the jawbone's place on the evolutionary tree of early man.

"We need other skeletal parts to evaluate the degree of its uniqueness," study co-author Yousuke Kaifu, a paleoanthropologist at Japan's National Museum of Nature and Science, told LiveScience. "The question of species can be effectively discussed after those steps."

Still, the discovery is exciting. It's the first evidence of ancient man in Taiwan.

"The available evidence at least does not exclude the possibility that they survived until the appearance of Homo sapiens in the region, and it is tempting to speculate about their possible contact," Kaifu told Discovery News.

The study was published this week in the journal Nature Communications.
http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2015/01/28/Jawbone-found-by-fisherman-may-belong-to-unclassified-human/4631422465187/#ixzz3QDTv6SBS

 
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About everything we thought about early man has been found wrong recently.

1. Homo erectus and modern humans interbred. "We found evidence for hybridization between modern humans and archaic forms in Africa,... “It looks like our lineage has always exchanged genes with their more morphologically diverged neighbors.”

2. Neanderthals promoted to fully human status: “On the western fringes of Siberia, the Stone Age Denisova cave has surrendered precious treasure: a toe bone that could shed light on early humans’ promiscuous relations with their hominin cousins.”

Out of time but there is more.
... The Denisova cave had already yielded a fossil tooth and finger bone, in 2000 and 2008. Last year, Pääbo's DNA analysis suggested both belonged to a previously unknown group of hominins, the Denisovans. The new bone, an extremely rare find, looks likely to belong to the same group.

It is a very exciting discovery, says Isabelle De Groote at London's Natural History Museum. "Hominin material from southern Siberia is rare and usually extremely fragmentary."

The primitive morphology of the 30,000 to 50,000-year-old Denisovan finger bone and tooth indicates that Denisovans separated from the Neanderthals roughly 300,000 years ago. At the time of the analysis, Pääbo speculated that they came to occupy large parts of east Asia at a time when Europe and western Asia were dominated by Neanderthals. By 40,000 years ago, Homo sapiens was also moving around much of the region. But the Denisovans remain known only from the finger and tooth fossils - not enough information to formally assign them to their own species.

That may change with analysis of the newly discovered toe bone. It was found in the same layer of the cave floor as the finger bone, by Maria Mednikova at the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow (Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia, vol 39, p 129).

Mednikova says this suggests it belonged to a contemporary individual, alive roughly 40,000 years ago. But her studies show the finger and toe bones belonged to distinct people. In addition, the toe bone is stocky and its shape is somewhere between that of a modern human and a typical Neanderthal. ...
 
About everything we thought about early man has been found wrong recently.

1. Homo erectus and modern humans interbred. "We found evidence for hybridization between modern humans and archaic forms in Africa,... “It looks like our lineage has always exchanged genes with their more morphologically diverged neighbors.”

2. Neanderthals promoted to fully human status: “On the western fringes of Siberia, the Stone Age Denisova cave has surrendered precious treasure: a toe bone that could shed light on early humans’ promiscuous relations with their hominin cousins.”

Out of time but there is more.
[SIZE=12pt]Modern humans interbred with more archaic hominin forms even before they migrated out of Africa: study[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]It is now widely accepted that the species Homo sapiens originated in Africa and eventually spread throughout the world. But did those early humans interbreed with more ancestral forms of the genus Homo, for example Homo erectus, the "upright walking man," Homo habilis, – the "tool-using man" or Homo neanderthalensis, the first artists of cave-painting fame? [/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]Direct studies of ancient DNA from Neanderthal bones suggest interbreeding did occur after anatomically modern humans had migrated from their evolutionary cradle in Africa to the cooler climates of Eurasia, but what had happened in Africa remained a mystery – until now.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]In a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences a team led by Michael Hammer, an associate professor and research scientist with the UA's Arizona Research Labs, provides evidence that anatomically modern humans were not so unique that they remained separate.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]"We found evidence for hybridization between modern humans and archaic forms in Africa. It looks like our lineage has always exchanged genes with their more morphologically diverged neighbors," said Hammer, who also holds appointments in the UA's department ofecology and evolutionary biology, the school of anthropology, the BIO5 Institute and the Arizona Cancer Center.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]Hammer added that recent advances in molecular biology have made it possible to extract DNA from fossils tens of thousands of years old and compare it to that of modern counterparts.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]However, "We don't have fossil DNA from Africa to compare with ours," he said. "Neanderthals lived in colder climates, but the climate in more tropical areas make it very tough for DNA to survive that long, so recovering usable samples from fossil specimens is extremely difficult if not impossible."[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]"Our work is different from the research that led to the breakthroughs in Neanderthal genetics," he explained. "We couldn't look directly for ancient DNA that is 40,000 years old and make a direct comparison."[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]To get past this hindrance, Hammer's team followed a computational and statistical approach.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]"Instead, we looked at DNA from modern humans belonging to African populations and searched for unusual regions in the genome."[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]Because nobody knows the DNA sequences of those now extinct archaic forms, Hammer's team first had to figure out what features of modern DNA might represent fragments that were brought in from archaic forms. [/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]"What we do know is that the sequences of those forms, even the Neanderthals, are not that different from modern humans," he said. "They have certain characteristics that make them different from modern DNA."[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]The researchers used simulations to predict what ancient DNA sequences would look like had they survived within the DNA of our own cells.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]"You could say we simulated interbreeding and exchange of genetic material in silico," Hammer said. "We can simulate a model of hybridization between anatomically modern humans and some archaic form. In that sense, we simulate history so that we can see what we would expect the pattern to look like if it did occur."[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]According to Hammer, the first signs of anatomically modern features appeared about 200,000 years ago.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]First, the team sequenced vast regions of human genomes from samples taken from six different populations living in Africa today and tried to match up their sequences with what they expected those sequences to look like in archaic forms. The researchers focused on non-coding regions of the genome, stretches of DNA that do not contain genes, which serve as the blueprints for proteins.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=12pt]"Then we asked ourselves what does the general pattern of variation look like in the DNA that we sequenced in those African populations, and we started to look at regions that looked unusual," Hammer said. "We discovered three different genetic regions fit the criteria for being archaic DNA still present in the genomes of sub-Saharan Africans. Interestingly, this signature was strongest in populations from central Africa." ...[/SIZE]
[SIZE=12pt]http://phys.org/news/2011-09-modern-humans-interbred-archaic-hominin.html[/SIZE]

Modern humans interbred with more archaic hominin forms even before they migrated out of Africa: studyRead more at: http://phys.org/news/2011-09-modern-humans-interbred-archaic-hominin.html#jCp

Modern humans interbred with more archaic hominin forms even before they migrated out of Africa: studyRead more at: http://phys.org/news/2011-09-modern-humans-interbred-archaic-hominin.html#jCp
Modern humans interbred with more archaic hominin forms even before they migrated out of Africa: studyRead more at: http://phys.org/news/2011-09-modern-humans-interbred-archaic-hominin.html#jCp
 
I bet the chimpanzee wished they made a better choice. "Cmon we are going to become humans. F**k that it will never work, we're going to just remain chimpanzees"...

 
About everything we thought about early man has been found wrong recently.

1. Homo erectus and modern humans interbred. "We found evidence for hybridization between modern humans and archaic forms in Africa,... “It looks like our lineage has always exchanged genes with their more morphologically diverged neighbors.”

2. Neanderthals promoted to fully human status: “On the western fringes of Siberia, the Stone Age Denisova cave has surrendered precious treasure: a toe bone that could shed light on early humans’ promiscuous relations with their hominin cousins.”

Out of time but there is more.
My favorite poster ever. What happened to golddigger/MoO?

 
I bet the chimpanzee wished they made a better choice. "Cmon we are going to become humans. F**k that it will never work, we're going to just remain chimpanzees"...
I can't say the chimps made the wrong call. Eat, drink, sleep, fight, bang who you like, cute lil' baby chimps, bananas all day, flowers that make you high, and basically avoid getting put in a zoo or tesearch lab. Sounds like a good deal.

 

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