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- <text id=94TT0290>
- <link 94TO0152>
- <title>
- Mar. 14, 1994: How Man Began
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 80
- How Man Began
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>New evidence shows that early humans left Africa much sooner
- than once thought. Did Homo sapiens evolve in many places at
- once?
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> No single, essential difference separates human beings from
- other animals--but that hasn't stopped the phrasemakers from
- trying to find one. They have described humans as the animals
- who make tools, or reason, or use fire, or laugh, or any one
- of a dozen other appealing oversimplifications. Here's one more
- description for the list, as good as any other: Humans are the
- animals who wonder, intensely and endlessly, about their origin.
- Starting with a Neanderthal skeleton unearthed in Germany in
- 1856, archaeologists and anthropologists have sweated mightily
- over excavations in Africa, Europe and Asia, trying to find
- fossil evidence that will answer the most fundamental questions
- of our existence: When, where and how did the human race arise?
- Nonscientists are as eager for the answers as the experts, if
- the constant outpouring of books and documentaries on the subject
- is any indication. The latest, a three-part Nova show titled
- In Search of Human Origins, premiered last week.
- </p>
- <p> Yet despite more than a century of digging, the fossil record
- remains maddeningly sparse. With so few clues, even a single
- bone that doesn't fit into the picture can upset everything.
- Virtually every major discovery has put deep cracks in the conventional
- wisdom and forced scientists to concoct new theories, amid furious
- debate.
- </p>
- <p> Now it appears to be happening once again. Findings announced
- in the past two weeks are rattling the foundations of anthropology
- and raising some startling possibilities. Humanity's ancestors
- may have departed Africa--the cradle of mankind--eons earlier
- than scientists have assumed. Humans may have evolved not just
- in a single place but in many places around the world. And our
- own species, Homo sapiens, may be much older than anyone had
- suspected. If even portions of these claims prove to be true,
- they will force a major rewrite of the book of human evolution.
- They will herald fundamental changes in the story of how we
- came to be who we are.
- </p>
- <p> The latest shocker comes in the current issue of Nature, where
- Chinese scientists have contended that the skull of a modern-looking
- human, found in their country a decade ago, is at least 200,000
- years old--more than twice as old as any Homo sapiens specimen
- ever found in that part of the world. Moreover, the skull has
- features resembling those of contemporary Asians. The controversial
- implication: modern humans may not have evolved just in Africa,
- as most scientists believe, but may have emerged simultaneously
- in several regions of the globe.
- </p>
- <p> The Nature article came only a week after an even more surprising
- report in the competing journal Science. U.S. and Indonesian
- researchers said they had redated fossil skull fragments found
- at two sites on the island of Java. Instead of being a million
- years old, as earlier analysis suggested, the fossils appear
- to date back nearly 2 million years. They are from the species
- known as Homo erectus--the first primate to look anything
- like modern humans and the first to use fire and create sophisticated
- stone tools. Says F. Clark Howell, an anthropologist at the
- University of California, Berkeley: "This is just overwhelming.
- No one expected such an age."
- </p>
- <p> If the evidence from Java holds up, it means that protohumans
- left their African homeland hundreds of thousands of years earlier
- than anyone had believed, long before the invention of the advanced
- stone tools that, according to current textbooks, made the exodus
- possible. It would also mean that Homo erectus had plenty of
- time to evolve into two different species, one African and one
- Asian. Most researchers are convinced that the African branch
- of the family evolved into modern humans. But what about the
- Asian branch? Did it die out? Or did it also give rise to Homo
- sapiens, as the new Chinese evidence suggests?
- </p>
- <p> Answering such questions requires convincing evidence--which
- is hard to come by in the contentious world of paleoanthropology.
- It is difficult to determine directly the age of fossils older
- than about 200,000 years. Fortunately, many specimens are found
- in sedimentary rock, laid down in layers through the ages. By
- developing ways of dating the rock layers, scientists have been
- able to approximate the age of fossils contained in them. But
- these methods are far from foolproof. The 200,000-year-old Chinese
- skull, in particular, is getting only a cautious reception from
- most scientists, in part because the dating technique used is
- still experimental.
- </p>
- <p> Confidence is much stronger in the ages put on the Indonesian
- Homo erectus fossils. The leaders of the team that did the analysis,
- Carl Swisher and Garniss Curtis of the Institute of Human Origins
- in Berkeley, are acknowledged masters of the art of geochronology,
- the dating of things from the past. Says Alan Walker of Johns
- Hopkins University, an expert on early humans: "The IHO is doing
- world-class stuff." There is always the chance that the bones
- Swisher and Curtis studied were shifted out of their original
- position by geologic forces or erosion, ending up in sediments
- much older than the fossils themselves. But that's probably
- not the case, since the specimens came from two different sites.
- "It is highly unlikely," Swisher points out, "that you'd get
- the same kind of errors in both places." The inescapable conclusion,
- Swisher maintains, is that Homo erectus left Africa nearly a
- million years earlier than previously thought.
- </p>
- <p> Experts are now scrambling to decide how this discovery changes
- the already complicated saga of humanity's origins. The longer
- scientists study the fossil record, the more convinced they
- become that evolution did not make a simple transition from
- ape to human. There were probably many false starts and dead
- ends. At certain times in some parts of the world, two different
- hominid species may have competed for survival. And the struggle
- could have taken a different turn at almost any point along
- the way. Modern Homo sapiens was clearly not the inevitable
- design for an intelligent being. The species seems to have been
- just one of several rival product lines--the only one successful
- today in the evolutionary marketplace.
- </p>
- <p> The story of that survivor, who came to dominate the earth,
- begins in Africa. While many unanswered questions remain about
- when and where modern humans first appeared, their ancestors
- almost surely emerged from Africa's lush forests nearly 4 million
- years ago. The warm climate was right, animal life was abundant,
- and that's where the oldest hominid fossils have been uncovered.
- </p>
- <p> The crucial piece of evidence came in 1974 with the discovery
- of the long-sought "missing link" between apes and humans. An
- expedition to Ethiopia led by Donald Johanson, now president
- of IHO, painstakingly pieced together a remarkable ancient primate
- skeleton. Although about 60% of the bones, including much of
- the skull, were missing, the scientists could tell that the
- animal stood 3 ft. 6 in. tall. That seemed too short for a hominid,
- but the animal had an all important human characteristic: unlike
- any species of primate known to have come before, this creature
- walked fully upright. How did the researchers know? The knee
- joint was built in such a way that the animal could fully straighten
- its legs. That would have freed it from the inefficient, bowlegged
- stride that keeps today's chimps and gorillas from extended
- periods of two-legged walking. Presuming that this diminutive
- hominid was a female, Johanson named her Lucy. (While he was
- examining the first fossils in his tent, the Beatles' Lucy in
- the Sky with Diamonds was playing on his tape recorder.)
- </p>
- <p> Since scientific names don't come from pop songs, Lucy was given
- the tongue-challenging classification Australopithecus afarensis.
- Many more remains of the species have turned up, including beautifully
- preserved footprints found in the mid-1970s in Tanzania by a
- team led by the famed archaeologist Mary Leakey. Set in solidified
- volcanic ash, the footprints confirmed that Lucy and her kin
- walked like humans. Some of the A. afarensis specimens date
- back about 3.9 million years B.P. (before the present), making
- them the oldest known hominid fossils.
- </p>
- <p> The final clue that Lucy was the missing link came when Johanson's
- team assembled fossil fragments, like a prehistoric jigsaw puzzle,
- into a fairly complete A. afarensis skull. It turned out to
- be much more apelike than human, with a forward-thrust jaw and
- chimp-size braincase. These short creatures (males were under
- five feet tall) were probably no smarter than the average ape.
- Their upright stance and bipedal locomotion, however, may have
- given them an advantage by freeing their hands, making them
- more efficient food gatherers.
- </p>
- <p> That's one theory at least. What matters under the laws of natural
- selection is that Lucy and her cousins thrived and passed their
- genes on to the next evolutionary generation. Between 3 million
- and 2 million years B.P., a healthy handful of descendants sprang
- from the A. afarensis line, upright primates that were similar
- to Lucy in overall body design but different in the details
- of bone structure. Australopithecus africanus, Paranthropus
- robustus, Paranthropus boisei--all flourished in Africa. But
- in the evolutionary elimination tournament, the two Paranthropus
- species eventually lost out. Only A. africanus, most scientists
- believe, survived to give rise to the next character in the
- human drama.
- </p>
- <p> This was a species called Homo habilis, or "handy man." Appearing
- about 2.5 million years B.P., the new hominid probably didn't
- look terribly different from its predecessors, but it had a
- somewhat larger brain. And, perhaps as a result of some mental
- connection other hominids were unable to make, H. habilis figured
- out for the first time how to make tools.
- </p>
- <p> Earlier protohumans had used tools too--bits of horn or bone
- for digging, sticks for fishing termites out of their mounds
- (something modern chimps still do). But H. habilis deliberately
- hammered on rocks to crack and flake them into useful shapes.
- The tools were probably not used for hunting, as anthropologists
- once thought; H. habilis, on average, was less than 5 ft. tall
- and weighed under 100 lbs., and it could hardly have competed
- with the lions and leopards that stalked the African landscape.
- The hominids were almost certainly scavengers instead, supplementing
- a mostly vegetarian diet with meat left over from predators'
- kills. Even other scavengers--hyenas, jackals and the like--were stronger and tougher than early humans. But H. habilis
- presumably had the intelligence to anticipate the habits of
- predators and scavengers, and probably used tools to butcher
- leftovers quickly and get back to safety.
- </p>
- <p> Their adaptations to the rigors of prehistoric African life
- enabled members of the H. habilis clan to survive as a species
- for 500,000 years or more, and at least one group of them apparently
- evolved, around 2 million years B.P., into a taller, stronger,
- smarter variety of human. From the neck down, Homo erectus,
- on average about 5 ft. 6 in. tall, was probably almost indistinguishable
- from a modern human. Above the neck--well, these were still
- primitive humans. The skulls have flattened foreheads and prominent
- brow ridges like those of a gorilla or chimpanzee, and the jawbone
- shows no hint of anything resembling a chin. Braincases got
- bigger and bigger over the years, but at first an adult H. erectus
- probably had a brain no larger than that of a modern four-year-old.
- Anyone who has spent time with a four-year-old, though, knows
- that such a brain can perform impressive feats of reasoning
- and creativity.
- </p>
- <p> H. erectus was an extraordinarily successful and mobile group,
- so well traveled, in fact, that fossils from the species were
- first found thousands of miles away from its original home in
- Africa. In the 1890s, Eugene Dubois, an adventurous Dutch physician,
- joined his country's army as an excuse to get to the Dutch East
- Indies (now Indonesia). Dubois agreed with Charles Darwin's
- idea that early humans and great apes were closely related.
- Since the East Indies had orangutans, Dubois thought, they might
- have fossils of the "missing link."
- </p>
- <p> While Dubois didn't find anything like Lucy, he discovered some
- intriguingly primitive fossils, a skullcap and a leg bone, in
- eroded sediments along the Solo River in Java. They looked partly
- human, partly simian, and Dubois decided that they belonged
- to an ancient race of ape-men. He called his creature Anthropopithecus
- erectus; its popular name was Java man. Over the next several
- decades, comparable bones were found in China (Peking man) and
- finally, starting in the 1950s, in Africa.
- </p>
- <p> Gradually, anthropologists realized that all these fossils were
- from creatures so similar that they could be assigned to a single
- species: Homo erectus. Although the African bones were the last
- to be discovered, some were believed to be much more ancient
- than those found anywhere else. The most primitive Asian fossils
- were considered to be a million years old at most, but the African
- ones went back at least 1.8 million years. The relative ages,
- plus the fact that H. erectus' ancestors were found exclusively
- in Africa, led scientists to conclude that H. erectus first
- emerged on that continent and then left sometime later.
- </p>
- <p> When and why did this footloose species take off from Africa?
- Undoubtedly, reasoned anthropologists, H. erectus made a breakthrough
- that let it thrive in a much broader range of conditions than
- it was accustomed to. And there was direct evidence of a major
- technological advance that could plausibly have done the trick.
- Excavations of sites dating back 1.4 million years B.P., 4,000
- centuries after H. erectus first appeared, uncovered multifaceted
- hand axes and cleavers much more finely fashioned than the simple
- stone tools used before. These high-tech implements are called
- Acheulean tools, after the town of St. Acheul, in France, where
- they were first discovered. With better tools, goes the theory,
- H. erectus would have had an easier time gathering food. And
- within a few hundred thousand years, the species moved beyond
- Africa's borders, spreading first into the Middle East and then
- into Europe and all the way to the Pacific.
- </p>
- <p> The theory was neat and tidy--as long as everyone overlooked
- the holes. One problem: if advanced tools were H. erectus' ticket
- out of Africa, why are they not found everywhere the travelers
- went? Alan Thorne, of the Australian National University in
- Canberra, suggests that the Asian H. erectus built advanced
- tools from something less durable than stone. "Tools made from
- bamboo," he observes, "are in many ways superior to stone tools,
- and more versatile." And bamboo, unlike stone, leaves no trace
- after a million years.
- </p>
- <p> The most direct evidence of the time H. erectus arrived in Asia
- is obviously the ages of the fossils found there. But accurate
- dates are elusive, especially in Java. In contrast to East Africa's
- Rift Valley, where the underground record of geological history
- has been lifted up and laid bare by faulting and erosion, most
- Javan deposits are buried under rice paddies. Since the subterranean
- layers of rock are not so easy to study, scientists have traditionally
- dated Javan hominids by determining the age of fossilized extinct
- mammals that crop up nearby. The two fossils cited in the new
- Science paper were originally dated that way. The "Mojokerto
- child," a juvenile skullcap found in 1936, was estimated to
- be about 1 million years old. And a crushed face and partial
- cranium from Sangiran were judged a bit younger.
- </p>
- <p> These ages might never have been seriously questioned were it
- not for a scientific maverick: the IHO's Curtis, one of the
- authors of the Science article. In 1970 he applied a radioactive-dating
- technique to bits of volcanic pumice from the fossil-bearing
- sediments at Mojokerto. Curtis' conclusion: the Mojokerto child
- was not a million years old but closer to 2 million. Nobody
- took much notice, however, because the technique is prone to
- errors in the kind of pumice found in Java. Curtis' dates would
- remain uncertain for more than two decades, until he and Swisher
- could re-evaluate the pumice with a new, far more accurate method.
- </p>
- <p> The new dates ended up validating Curtis' previous work. The
- Mojokerto child and the Sangiran fossils were about 1.8 million
- and 1.7 million years old, respectively, comparable in age to
- the oldest Homo erectus from Africa. Here, then, was a likely
- solution to one of the great mysteries of human evolution. Says
- Swisher: "We've always wondered why it would take so long for
- hominids to get out of Africa." The evident answer: it didn't
- take them much time at all, at least by prehistoric standards--probably no more than 100,000 years, instead of nearly a
- million.
- </p>
- <p> If that's true, the notion that H. erectus needed specialized
- tools to venture from Africa is completely superseded. But Swisher
- doesn't find the conclusion all that surprising. "Elephants
- left Africa several times during their history," he points out.
- "Lots of animals expand their ranges. The main factor may have
- been an environmental change that made the expansion easier.
- No other animal needed stone tools to get out of Africa."
- </p>
- <p> Scientists already have evidence that even the earliest hominids,
- the australopithecines, could survive in a variety of habitats
- and climates. Yale paleontologist Elisabeth Vrba believes that
- their evolutionary success--and the subsequent thriving of
- the genus Homo as well--was tied to climate changes taking
- place. About 2.5 million to 2.7 million years ago, an ice age
- sent global temperatures plummeting as much as 20F, prompting
- the conversion of moist African woodland into much drier, open
- savanna.
- </p>
- <p> By studying fossils, Vrba found that the populations of large
- mammals in these environments underwent a huge change. Many
- forest antelopes were replaced by giant buffalo and other grazers.
- Vrba believes that early hominid evolution can be interpreted
- the same way. As grasslands continued to expand and tree cover
- to shrink, forest-dwelling chimpanzees yielded to bipedal creatures
- better adapted to living in the open. H. erectus, finally, was
- equipped to spread throughout the Old World.
- </p>
- <p> If early humans' adaptability let them move into new environments,
- Walker of Johns Hopkins believes, it was an increasingly carnivorous
- diet that drove them to do so. "Once you become a carnivore,"
- he says, "the world is different. Carnivores need immense home
- ranges." H. erectus probably ate both meat and plants, as humans
- do today. But, says Walker, "there was a qualitative difference
- between these creatures and other primates. I think they actively
- hunted. I've always said that they should have gotten out of
- Africa as soon as possible." Could H. erectus have traveled
- all the way to Asia in just tens of thousands of years? Observes
- Walker: "If you spread 20 miles every 20 years, it wouldn't
- take long to go that far."
- </p>
- <p> The big question now: How does the apparent quick exit from
- Africa affect one of the most heated debates in the field of
- human evolution? On one side are anthropologists who hold to
- the "out of Africa" theory--the idea that Homo sapiens first
- arose only in Africa. Their opponents champion the ``multiregional
- hypothesis"--the notion that modern humans evolved in several
- parts of the world.
- </p>
- <p> Swisher and his colleagues believe that their discovery bolsters
- the out-of-Africa side. If African and Asian H. erectus were
- separate for almost a million years, the reasoning goes, they
- could have evolved into two separate species. But it would be
- virtually impossible for those isolated groups to evolve into
- one species, H. sapiens. Swisher thinks the Asian H. erectus
- died off and H. sapiens came from Africa separately.
- </p>
- <p> Not necessarily, says Australia's Thorne, a leading multiregionalist,
- who offers another interpretation. Whenever H. erectus left
- Africa, the result would have been the same: populations did
- not evolve in isolation but in concert, trading genetic material
- by interbreeding with neighboring groups. "Today," says Thorne,
- "human genes flow between Johannesburg and Beijing and between
- Paris and Melbourne. Apart from interruptions from ice ages,
- they have probably been doing this through the entire span of
- Homo sapiens' evolution."
- </p>
- <p> Counters Christopher Stringer of Britain's Natural History Museum:
- "If we look at the fossil record for the last half-million years,
- Africa is the only region that has continuity of evolution from
- primitive to modern humans." The oldest confirmed fossils from
- modern humans, Stringer points out, are from Africa and the
- Middle East, up to 120,000 years B.P., and the first modern
- Europeans and Asians don't show up before 40,000 years B.P.
- </p>
- <p> But what about the new report of the 200,000-year-old human
- skull in China? Stringer thinks that claim won't stand up to
- close scrutiny. If it does, he and his colleagues will have
- a lot of explaining to do.
- </p>
- <p> This, after all, is the arena of human evolution, where no theory
- dies without a fight and no bit of new evidence is ever interpreted
- the same way by opposing camps. The next big discovery could
- tilt the scales toward the multiregional hypothesis, or confirm
- the out-of-Africa theory, or possibly lend weight to a third
- idea, discounted by most--but not all--scientists: that
- H. erectus emerged somewhere outside Africa and returned to
- colonize the continent that spawned its ancestors.
- </p>
- <p> The next fossil find could even point to an unknown branch of
- the human family tree, perhaps another dead end or maybe another
- intermediate ancestor. The only certainty in this data-poor,
- imagination-rich, endlessly fascinating field is that there
- are plenty of surprises left to come.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-