Fossils Hint at Who Left Africa First.An excavation in central Asia has unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. a pair of 1.7-million-year-old fossil skulls, providing a glimpse of what may have been the first species of human ancestors to journey out of Africa. The partial skulls resemble Homo ergaster Homo ergaster ("working man") is an extinct hominid species (or subspecies, according to some authorities) which lived throughout eastern and southern Africa between 1.9 to 1.4 million years ago with the advent of the lower Pleistocene and the cooling of the global climate. , a contested fossil species dating to around the same time in eastern Africa, concludes a team led by anthropologist Leo Leo, in astronomy Leo [Lat.,=the lion], northern constellation lying S of Ursa Major and on the ecliptic (apparent path of the sun through the heavens) between Cancer and Virgo; it is one of the constellations of the zodiac. Gabunia of the Republic of Georgia National Academy of Sciences in Tbilisi. The skulls showed fewer links to Homo erectus Homo erectus (hō`mō ērĕk`təs), extinct hominid living between 1.6 million and 250,000 years ago. Homo erectus is thought to have evolved in Africa from H. habilis, the first member of the genus Homo. specimens in eastern Asia from as early as 1.6 million years ago. "[H. ergaster] may represent the species that initially dispersed from Africa and from which the Asian branch of H. erectus was derived," Gabunia and his coworkers assert in the May 12 SCIENCE. However, some scientists doubt the H. ergaster classification and instead place those fossils within H. erectus, which they view as the first human ancestor to have departed Africa. A longstanding theory holds that H. erectus made the first move out of Africa more recently than 1 million years ago, after learning to make double-edged stone hand axes. In contrast, archaeologist Ofer Bar-Yosef of Harvard University champions the view that H. ergaster bearing simpler stone tools left Africa as early as 1.8 million years ago. Early migrants probably followed forested regions into Asia searching for larger hunting territories and relief from Africa's tropical diseases, he theorizes. The newly discovered fossils, retrieved from ancient sediment beneath a medieval castle at Dmanisi in the Republic of Georgia, support Bar-Yosef's scenario, Gabunia and his colleagues say. Both Dmanisi skulls exhibit important similarities to H. ergaster craniums. These include large bony ridges above the eyes, a sharply angled braincase brain·case n. The part of the skull that encloses the brain; the cranium. at the back of the head, and a smaller cranial cranial /cra·ni·al/ (-al) 1. pertaining to the cranium. 2. toward the head end of the body; a synonym of superior in humans and other bipeds. cra·ni·al adj. volume--signifying a smaller brain--than H. erectus shows. The skulls appeared in sediment that had already yielded the fossil jaw of an undetermined Homo species (SN: 2/11/95, p. 85). More than 1,000 stone artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. found with the fossils feature single edges and other signs of simple tool construction. Three lines of evidence narrowed the age estimate for the fossil finds to 1.7 million years. These consisted of magnetic reversals in the soil just above the skulls, measurements of the decay of the element argon argon (är`gŏn) [Gr.,=inert], gaseous chemical element; symbol Ar; at. no. 18; at. wt. 39.948; m.p. −189.2°C;; b.p. −185.7°C;; density 1.784 grams per liter at STP; valence 0. in fossil-bearing soil, and the bones of extinct rodents and other ancient creatures found with the skulls. H. ergaster in Africa was taller than earlier Homo species and as tall as modern people. This size increase required high-quality protein sources, such as meat, suggest the researchers. An expansion of home ranges to follow the movements of prey may have led to migrations out of Africa, they propose. The new finds look little like the earliest Homo skulls in western Europe, which date to about 1 million years ago. Colonization of western Europe from Africa or central Asia may have first occurred at that later date, the scientists say. "The Dmanisi skulls are a most extraordinary discovery," comments anthropologist Bernard Wood of George Washington (D.C.) University. "It's the best evidence to date that Homo ergaster existed outside Africa." Harvard anthropologist David Pilbeam agrees. H. ergaster, which had a "stunningly" small brain for its body size, apparently left Africa for reasons that had nothing to do with burgeoning intelligence or toolmaking The term toolmaking (sometimes styled as tool-making or tool making) may refer to:
Although the Dmanisi braincases are surprisingly small, they nevertheless represent a regional variation of H. erectus, argues anthropologist G. Philip Rightmire of the State University of New York at Binghamton Binghamton University, State University of New York, or their officially adopted name, Binghamton University, is a coeducational public research university located in Vestal, New York. . Some H. erectus skulls in Java and China only slightly exceed the Dmanisi finds in cranial volume, he says. |
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