domingo, 26 de febrero de 2012

The Hobbit who helped us find our origins

Chris Stringer on how a series of extraordinary finds has transformed our view of human history – and of the cousins with whom we long shared the planet .

By

Human beings have come to dominate our planet like no other creature before us. Today, our seven-billion-strong population inhabits most of the surface of the world, secure in its status as the only truly intelligent species on Earth.

Yet if we look even a little way back into the planet’s history, we come to a time – possibly as recently as 50,000 years ago – when there may have been as many as seven distinct types of human, from Africa to Europe to the wilds of Siberia and the remote islands of Indonesia. We, Homo sapiens, are the sole survivor of this menagerie – but for most of human history, we were not alone.

So where did these other “humans” come from? And what happened to them to leave us as the only human denizens of the Earth? In recent years, a slew of exciting discoveries in Africa, Europe and elsewhere has turned the received wisdom on its head. We have learned that the story of our origins is far more interesting – and complicated – than we ever thought.

That story starts with a single species, the probable ancestor of this human family. This was Homo erectus (“Erect Man”, because it walked upright), characterised by a powerfully robust skeleton and a small-brained skull which was thick-walled, long and low, with a glowering brow ridge over the eyes and a chinless lower jaw. Despite these differences from the current model, erectus was an effective tool-maker and hunter, with a body shape more human than ape-like.

Homo erectus emerged in Africa some two million years ago, and rapidly spread across Asia and possibly southern Europe as well (Britain was probably only occupied a million years on, by later human species). It is possible that erectus hung on in Java until as recently as 50,000 years ago, making this species by far the longest-lived of all the humans. And during that time, it begat a whole tribe of descendants. These included Homo antecessor and Heidelberg Man, with the latter giving rise to three recent successors: the Neanderthals (who lived in Europe and the Near East), Homo sapiens (“Wise Man”), and a mysterious third kind of human, the Denisovans, who are known only from a single site in Siberia...

The Telegraph
Link 2: 26-02-12. El Hobbit que nos ayudó a encontrar nuestros orígenes

2 comentarios:

salaman.es dijo...

Añadido link a: El Hobbit que nos ayudó a encontrar nuestros orígenes.

salaman.es dijo...

Yo ya no me aclaro con este cacao del blog. Cuando actualizo una entrada ya no se donde va a aparecer :(