Early humans co-existed in Africa with
human-like species 300,000 years ago
Send a link to a friend
[May 10, 2017]
By Ed Stoddard
KROMDRAAI, South Africa (Reuters) -
Scientists unveiled the first evidence on Tuesday that early humans
co-existed in Africa 300,000 years ago with a small-brained human-like
species thought to already be extinct on the continent at that time.
The findings, published in three papers in the journal "eLife", raise
fresh questions about human evolution, including the prospect that
behaviors previously attributed to humans may have been developed by
hominin precursors of Homo sapiens.
Hominins are an extinct group of the same genus as humans, the only
surviving members of that category today. Man's nearest living
relatives, chimpanzees and gorillas, are further removed from Homo
sapiens biologically than hominins are.
The species in question is Homo naledi, named in 2015 after a rich cache
of its fossils was unearthed near Sterkfontein and Swartkrans in South
Africa.
These treasure troves, some 50 km (30 miles) northwest of Johannesburg,
have yielded pieces of the puzzle of human evolution for decades.
Scientists initially thought Homo naledi's anatomy suggested the fossils
might be as much as 2.5 million years old and were startled by evidence
that suggested the species may have buried its dead, a trait long
believed to be uniquely human.
But dating of the sediments in which the fossils were found and teeth of
the specimens showed that the species was roaming the African bush
between 236,000 and 335,000 years ago, around the time that modern
humans were emerging.
"No one thought that a small-brained, primitive hominin could extend
down through time this long and that period is exactly the moment when
we thought modern humans were arising here in Africa," said Lee Berger,
project leader for Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand.
Berger said the dating may force scientists to rethink their
understanding of the emergence at that time of new technologies such as
ochre production and bead work for adornments.
There is archeological evidence from that period but little in the way
of fossils to suggest who exactly made such things.
"Now that we know that modern humans or at least the earliest forms of
them were not alone during this expansion of the tool kit, it makes us
now have to get better and better evidence to say who made what," Berger
told Reuters.
[to top of second column] |
Professor Lee Berger holds a cast of the new Homo naledi skull at
the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage site near Johannesburg, South
Africa. REUTERS/James Oatway
The question of when Homo naledi went extinct, and why, remains
unanswered, Berger said. Those pre-humans could have survived until
200,000 years ago or even more recently as the fossils uncovered so
far do not indicate "an extinction event."
Homo sapiens may have been the culprit. Some scientists believe
early modern humans drove other hominin relatives - for example,
Neanderthals in Europe - to extinction elsewhere.
"All we know is that Homo naledi is extinct today. Could Homo
sapiens have driven them extinct? Yes," Berger said.
Scientists also know from DNA evidence that Homo sapiens interbred
with Neanderthals, so it could have mated with Homo naledi as well,
though it was a more primitive hominin.
"Could there have been gene exchange between Homo naledi and early
Homo sapiens? It’s entirely possible," Berger said.
He said one of the next steps in this quest was to obtain Homo
naledi DNA, which has so far proved elusive, but researchers are
trying.
"If we had Homo naledi DNA, not only would we be able to answer the
question of a biological exchange with humans, but we would gain a
window back millions of years.
"We would actually be looking at DNA from the split with humans. And
that would be cool," Berger said.
(Reporting by Ed Stoddard; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |