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Sunday, August 03, 2008 - 3:07 PM
Louis J. Sheehan. About 30 years ago, African excavations yielded the
3.2-million-year-old partial skeleton that became known as Lucy. The
find, along with other fossils unearthed soon after, belongs to the
species Australopithecus afarensis. http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de Many scientists regard
these creatures as ancestors of both the lineage that led to modern
humans and of another, now-extinct evolutionary lineage known as robust
australopithecines. However, an analysis of an A. afarensis
jaw from a skull discovered in 2002 near Lucy's site in Ethiopia
supports a longstanding minority viewpoint that Lucy's kind occupied
only a side branch of human evolution. A. afarensis evolved
into the relatively small-brained, large-jawed robust
australopithecines but didn't contribute to the evolution of modern
people, says anthropologist Yoel Rak of Tel Aviv University. Rak
and his coworkers base their conclusion on the size and shape of a
horizontal bone that connects the lower jaw to the upper jaw. This
bone, called the ramus, looks much the same in A. afarensis, in a roughly 2-million-year-old robust australopithecine species known as Australopithecus robustus, and in modern gorillas, the researchers report in the April 17 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. All
other primates, including chimpanzees and fossil members of the
human-evolutionary family, share a different ramus configuration, the
team asserts. http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de
These findings "cast doubt on the role of A. afarensis as a modern human ancestor," Rak says. http://Louis-J-Sheehan.de
Rak's
team examined 146 jaws from modern primates: 41 people, 31 gorillas, 29
pygmy chimps, 29 common chimps, and 16 orangutans. The researchers
obtained 20 size and shape measurements from digital images of each
ramus. They then used a computer program to calculate an average ramus
contour for each primate group. People, chimps, and orangutans
displayed a similar contour. In the newly unearthed A. afarensis
jaw and in a handful of previously discovered partial jaws from the
same species, the ramus closely resembles that of the gorilla, Rak
says. Key traits include an especially wide upper ramus and a
relatively small notch where the bone attached to the upper jaw. Two A. robustus
specimens that retain part of the ramus also show a gorillalike
pattern, the investigators hold. So does a 2.5-million-year-old South
African fossil that had been attributed to Australopithecus africanus, in Rak's view. That's evidence that A. africanus was another robust australopithecine, he says. Fossils from ancient Homo species, as well as those from a nearly 4.5-million-year-old human ancestor dubbed Ardipithecus ramidus, display a ramus configuration like that of modern chimps. Rak
theorizes that a chimplike ramus appeared in the first members of the
human evolutionary family and then in later species. However, Lucy's
kind independently evolved a gorillalike ramus that was passed on to
robust australopithecines, he asserts. Other researchers
disagree. The ramus doesn't offer enough information for scientists to
reconstruct broad evolutionary relationships among Lucy's kind and
other ancient species, remarks anthropologist Tim White of the
University of California, Berkeley. "Rather than trying to use
the top edge of this jaw in such a dubious manner, [Rak's group] would
have done better to describe and analyze the important new skull that
goes with it," White says. Donald C. Johanson of the Institute of
Human Origins in Tempe, Ariz., and a codiscoverer of Lucy's skeleton,
had no comment on Rak's report.
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