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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Science
& Technology : Evolution
New fossil discovery shows earlier human migration out of
Africa
By Walter Gilberti
29 May 2000
Use
this version to print
A multinational team of paleoanthropologists has published
their findings following the unearthing last May of the oldest
undisputed human fossil remains outside of Africa. The remains
of two individual skulls were discovered at an archaeological
site at Dmanisi, Georgia, in the former Soviet Union. These new
findings have pushed back the estimated time of the first human
migrations out of Africa by several hundred thousand years.
Utilizing the latest dating techniqueswhich include paleomagnetic
measurements based on changes in the Earth' s magnetic polarity,
combined with a careful study of fossil animal remains at the
sitethe team has established, with a fair degree of certainty,
that these human ancestors of our genus Homo left Africa and spread
at least as far as Eurasia 1.7 million years ago. Another fossil
humanthat of a Homo erectus discovered at Sangiran on the
island of Javawas dated in 1994 at 1.8 million years old,
but that date is currently being challenged. Before these discoveries,
the oldest hominid fossil found in Europe was a crushed skull
from Ceprano, Italy, which had been dated at a much more recent
800,000 to 900,000 years ago.
The case for the Dmanisi find being older than the Java hominid
is bolstered by the physical appearance of the remains, which
resemble that of an earlier human ancestor called Homo ergaster,
a somewhat more primitive and smaller-brained precursor of Homo
erectus. Until the Dmanisi discovery, Homo ergaster remains had
only been found in east Africa. The taxonomic identification of
these fossil individuals remains a contentious issue, with some
specialists willing to classify both fossils as simply varieties
of Homo erectus. However the cranial capacity (brain size) of
the two Dmanisi skulls, at 780 and 650 cubic centimeters at most,
would place them at the low end of the Homo erectus range, suggesting
that they are of an older date than the Java Hominid, regardless
of species classification.
Of even greater significance, however, is the apparent primitiveness
of the Dmanisi humans' toolkit. Up until now, it had been thought
that the first human migrations out of Africa had occurred only
after the invention of the stone hand-ax associated with Homo
erectus. This tool making ability, called the Acheulean after
the place of its original discovery in France, is associated with
human remains found throughout much of Africa, Europe and Asia.
The toolkit of the Dmanisi humans, however, consisting of crudely
made chopping tools, points to an older tool making tradition
called the Oldowan, previously found only in Africa. According
to University of Michigan paleoanthropologist Milford Wolpoff,
"the overwhelming discovery is that there are Oldowan-using
people colonizing outside of Africa."
According to Susan Anton, who co-authored the paper published
in the May 12 issue of the journal Science, if the findings
concerning the earlier departure of hominids from Africa are correct,
"it is biology, not new tools, that prompted their dispersal.
As soon as you get larger body sizes and brains, you see shifts
in what they eat and how far they range that ultimately leads
them out of Africa."
While this is undoubtedly true, it may also be the case that
biological changes were bound up with cultural advances not directly
associated with the making of better tools. With Homo erectus,
for example, the growth in brain size, as well as its increased
physical stature, was not accompanied by a widening of the birth
canal in females, thus making it impossible for a human infant
to be born with a fully developed brain. As a result, the human
brain continues to grow for several years after birth, in effect
extending the gestation period and rendering the early infant
vulnerable.
The problem that confronted our human ancestorshow to
protect offspring that remain essentially helpless for years after
birthcould only have been resolved through the development
of a more complex and decidedly human social organization. This
new social human, who had already acquired a taste for meat, would
be a more efficient scavenger, as well as a limited hunter, capable
of greatly expanding its range.
It is believed that these early humans migrated out of Africa
via the Middle East, through an area known as the Levantine corridor.
From there, scientists believe that climatic conditions, which
prevented a turn westward toward Europe, forced these human ancestors
to take a southerly route across Asia to their eventual destinations:
China and what is now Indonesia.
See Also:
New fossil find provides
important clues to man's prehistory
[5 May 1999]
A highly
significant discovery
Oldest human-like fossil uncovered in South Africa
[30 December 1998]
Human
Evolution
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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