WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 (Xinhua) -- An international team
of scientists reported Thursday that the skeleton of an early human who lived
4.4 million years ago shows humans did not evolve from chimpanzee-like
ancestors.
The 17-year investigation into the discovery of the
extremely fragile remains of the small "ground ape" found in the Afar region of
Ethiopia will be described Friday in a special issue of the journal Science. The
journal will also contain 11 papers about the discovery.
The fossil, nicknamed "Ardi," is the earliest
skeleton known from the human branch of the primate family tree. The branch
includes Homosapiens as well as species closer to humans than to chimpanzees and
bonobos. The discoveries provide new insights about how hominids -- the family
of "great apes" comprising humans, chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans -- may
have emerged from an ancestral ape.
Until the discovery of Ardi, the earliest well-known
stage of human evolution was Australopithecus, the small-brained, fully bipedal
"ape man" that lived between four million and one million years ago. The most
famous Australopithecus fossil is the 3.2-million-year-old "Lucy," which was
named after the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds." Lucy was found in
1974 about45 miles north of where Ardi would later be discovered. Ardi's
skeleton and associated Ardipithecus ramidus remains are older and more
primitive than Australopithecus.
After Lucy's discovery, there was some expectation
that when earlier hominid remains were found, they would converge to a
chimpanzee-like anatomy, based on the genetic similarity of humans and chimps.
The Ardipithecus ramidus fossils do not, however, corroborate this expectation.
Ardi's skeleton contains enough of the skull, teeth,
pelvis, legs, feet, arms, and hands to estimate her body weight and height; that
she walked on two legs on the ground, but climbed trees and spent time in them
as well; and that she probably was omnivorous. What may come as a surprise is
that Ardi and her companions did not have limb proportions like chimps or
gorillas, but rather like those of extinct apes or even monkeys, and that her
hands are also not chimpanzee- or gorilla-like, but more closely related to
earlier extinct apes.
Scientists said the findings suggest that hominids
and African apes have each followed different evolutionary paths, and that we
can no longer consider chimps as "proxies" for our last common ancestor.
"Darwin was very wise on this matter," Tim White from
the University of California Berkeley, who helped lead the research team,
observed.
"Darwin said we have to be really careful. The only
way we're really going to know what this last common ancestor looked like is to
go and find it. Well, at 4.4 million years ago we found something pretty close
to it. And, just like Darwin appreciated, evolution of the ape lineages and the
human lineage has been going on independently since the time those lines split,
since that last common ancestor we shared," White said.