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A
newly discovered fossil has shaken up science’s view of human evolution and
could be the missing link between apes and humans: 400,000 years older than the
oldest human bone found, the discovery could entirely rewrite our story.
For
decades scientists have been stumped on the gap between humans that walked bent
over and those that walked upright. Who was the mysterious ancestor that joined
the ape-like Australopithecus with the human-like Homo? We could be looking at
an answer. It now appears the timeline for earliest upright humans goes back
not to 2.3 – but to 2.8 million years, according to RT.com.
Research report on the findings continues:
An
Ethiopian student at Arizona State University and an accompanying research team
discovered the lower jawbone and five teeth in Ethiopia in 2013. Now, for the
first time, the findings have been published in two papers simultaneously, while a third supported the notion that this could indeed be a unique
species, and not a Homo habilis.
The
fragments definitely belong to the Homo lineage (of which we are the only
remainder), but scientists are puzzled about what the species exactly is. In
fact, it could turn out to be a completely new one.
Found
250 miles from Addis Ababa, the fragments are believed to belong to our
ancestor from when the current dry land was still wetlands, interspersed with
trees providing shade and rivers nourishing them. It was discovered not too far
from another famous find – Lucy, the ape-like Austrolapithecus afarensis, known
to be the earliest potential ancestor of the human family.
That
transition between the two types is the first time in our history we switched
from bashing things with rocks to actually using our brains to solve puzzles,
although there was another transitional type – the crude and less brainy
Paranthropus – thought to have appeared just before the transition to Homo.
"There is a big gap in the
fossil record between about 2.5 million and 3 million years ago — there's
virtually nothing relating to the ancestors of Homo from that time period, in
spite of a lot of people looking," study co-author and
one of the leaders of the team, Brian Villmoare of the University of Nevada,
told Live Science.
Now,
for the first time, the 700,000-year hole between Lucy-like and Homo-type
humans is beginning to fill up with information.
“This is a little piece of the
puzzle that opens the door to new types of questions and field investigations
that we can go after to try to find additional evidence to fill in this poorly
known time period,” ASU Institute of Human Origins director
William H. Kimbel said in the press release.
“It’s an excellent case of a
transitional fossil in a critical time period in human evolution,”
he added.
The
nature of the new find is not without its naysayers: some scientists have
posited that the fossil actually belongs to the well-known species of Homo
habilis –the earliest known member of the Homo lineage. But careful digital
processing has shown that these are not Homo habilis fragments and they in fact
belong to a creature that came shortly before it.
It
took years for scientists to get to where they are now. The research started in
2002 with painstaking surveying. The scientists were careful not to disturb
anything unnecessarily. “So it took us basically 13 years
to find this [human ancestor]. It doesn’t mean that the work that we did was
wasted up until that time. But when we did find this [jaw], we were pretty
excited that after all this time it actually worked out,” assistant professor and co-author Chris
Campisano said.
The
expectation was that if they were to dig around the area, they would find
Lucy’s contemporaries – not what looked like the missing link.
“We first started collecting
fossils in the area around where the jaw was eventually found in 2012,” Campisano went on. “When we realized how old the
sediments were, we thought we might be able to find more specimens of Lucy’s species
and figure out what happened to that lineage. Instead, we were rewarded with a
much more exciting discovery.”
“Honestly, it was an exciting
moment…I had good experience in field surveying and knew where potential
sediments are. I climbed up a little plateau and found this specimen right on
the edge of the hill,” said Chalachew Seyoum, the student behind
the find.
What
we know for sure, according to Professor Kaye Reed of ASU, is that the creature
walked on two legs and lived in eastern Africa. Diet and tool use are very
important logical next steps to understanding just how clever this ancestor
was.
The research continues at
ASU for other fossils around the same area to find answers to those questions.
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