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- <text id=94TT0381>
- <title>
- Apr. 11, 1994: Lucy's Grandson
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 11, 1994 Risky Business on Wall Street
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 66
- Lucy's Grandson
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A fossil skull implies that humanity's earliest known progenitors
- belonged to a single, long-lived species
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Alice Park/New York
- </p>
- <p> Just about everybody has heard of Lucy, the diminutive, apelike
- superstar of human evolution. The discovery of her fossilized
- partial skeleton in 1974 was startling evidence that humanity's
- ancestors walked the earth more than 3 million years ago, hundreds
- of thousands of years earlier than anyone had imagined. Since
- that find, paleontologists have unearthed many similar bones,
- some even older than Lucy's, in the same part of Ethiopia where
- she was found. Most believe that all the fossils come from a
- single species (scientific name: Australopithecus afarensis)
- and that this species was probably the forerunner of all later
- hominids, including modern Homo sapiens.
- </p>
- <p> But there has always been a band of anthropological dissidents
- who subscribe to a different theory. A. afarensis was not a
- single species, they say, but a group of loosely related species.
- If that is true, then there must have been an even older species,
- still undiscovered, that was ancestral to them all. The debate
- has been difficult to resolve, because fossil hunters have never
- found a key piece of evidence: an intact A. afarensis skull.
- Skulls are the Rosetta stones of anthropology, bearing unique
- features that let scientists determine whether two fossil samples
- come from the same type of creature.
- </p>
- <p> Now they have the evidence. Researchers from the Institute of
- Human Origins (IHO) in Berkeley, California, and from Tel Aviv
- University in Israel report in the current issue of Nature that
- they have discovered a nearly intact skull from a male A. afarensis
- who lived about 200,000 years after Lucy--call him Lucy's
- Grandson--along with several arm bones from other males. The
- new fossils virtually clinch the view that A. afarensis is one
- species, placing it more firmly than ever at the root of the
- human family tree. And because the specimens are nearly a million
- years younger than the very oldest A. afarensis bones, they
- argue that Lucy and her relatives were an extraordinarily long-lived
- species. Says Alan Walker, an expert on early human anatomy
- at Johns Hopkins: "Everybody's very excited about this."
- </p>
- <p> The notion that A. afarensis might have been more than one species
- was largely based on the wide range of sizes of the specimens.
- Lucy, for instance, appeared to have been only about 3 ft. 6
- in. tall and to have weighed 60 to 65 lbs., while some males
- would have topped 5 ft. and 110 lbs. Size variations between
- the sexes are common among the great apes, but they aren't usually
- this drastic among hominids. (Despite the extreme examples of,
- say, the towering Shaquille O'Neal and the tiny Dr. Ruth Westheimer,
- there's only about a 5-in. difference between the average modern
- man and woman.)
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, the relatively few afarensis arm and leg bones that
- had been found seemed to show structural differences for different
- means of locomotion. The smaller females were evidently better
- at swinging through trees than the males, while the males appeared
- to be better at walking. It was hard to imagine that members
- of a single species could be built so differently.
- </p>
- <p> But there were good arguments on the other side. While modern
- humans don't vary much in size, other early hominids did. Besides,
- argues William Kimbel of the IHO, principal author of the Nature
- report, if there really were two species, then we have just
- happened to find only females from one and males from the other--an almost inconceivable coincidence.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, the few hundred afarensis bone fragments scientists
- have dug up over the past 20 years have been too few and too
- fragmentary to advance the argument very far in either direction.
- That is why Lucy's Grandson is a breakthrough. Says Walker:
- "We've had parts of afarensis skulls from different individuals,
- but now we know what a single skull looks like, and we have
- the proportions correct."
- </p>
- <p> Those proportions, and comparisons between the grandson and
- other, more fragmentary skulls both large and small, convince
- Kimbel and his colleagues that afarensis was indeed a single
- species, as they had believed all along. The arm bones, too,
- appear to bolster this idea. According to Leslie Aiello, an
- anthropologist at University College London, they have exactly
- the robust, curving form you would expect from a tree climber.
- The two sexes didn't have different kinds of skills, she says,
- but were both "a mosaic, bipedal from the waist down and arboreal
- from the waist up."
- </p>
- <p> As for what was above the neck, the skull confirms earlier constructs
- based on fragments: A. afarensis had an apelike face with a
- forward-thrusting jaw and an overhanging brow. The brain was
- no bigger than a chimp's, but it is now clear that Lucy and
- her kin were hardy enough to adapt to changing environments
- and thus to survive for some 9,000 centuries. And unless older
- hominid fossils are found--always a possibility--they will
- retain their distinction as the first evolutionary step that
- began to distinguish humans from other animals.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-