Ape or Human?

Controversy Over Famed Ancient Skull

A six to seven million-year-old skull from northern Chad that shook the world when its discovery was announced this July (2002) may not be what its discoverers' believe it to be: the oldest known member of the human family. "It is an ape and not a human ancestor," said Milford Wolpoff, an anthropologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

But the lead scientist who discovered the skull, Michel Brunet of the University of Poitiers in France, stands by his theory that the fossil is a hominid.

Both sides of the debate are published in the October 10 issue of the journal Nature.

The Debate

The skull and other fossilized remains were first reported in the July 11 (2002) issue of Nature by an international team of scientists led by Brunet.

The researchers and the journal touted the fossils then as belonging to the earliest member of the human family so far discovered, proclamations that the scientific community knew would come under scrutiny.

Chris Stringer, head of the Human Origins Program at the National History Museum in London, told National Geographic News in July that discoveries such as this are always complex because evidence is usually incomplete and there is little agreement about what key features characterize a distinct human ancestor.

The analysis by Wolpoff and colleagues centers on the argument that the fossil, formally known as Sahelanthropus tchadensis and nicknamed Toumaï, does not have a feature that they believe is essential for it to be considered a hominid: the ability to walk on two feet.

"It does not share the single unifying feature of all humans and hominids, erect posture and obligate bipedal locomotion," said Wolpoff. "It could of course be an ancestor of both humans and chimpanzees, it certainly is early enough, but there is no reason to be sure it is the ancestor of any surviving species."

Wolfpoff and colleagues suggest that another species, Orrorin tugenensis, found in Kenya, well-adapted to walking upright, and announced in 2001 is actually the earliest member of the human family.

Brunet refutes the argument by Wolpoff and colleagues as "not supported by published or unpublished data" in a reply also in the October 10 (2002) issue of Nature. He reiterates his belief that Toumaï is the earliest known human ancestor.

"Whatever the truth about Sahelanthropus, it is still a find of great importance," said Stringer in a comment sent to National Geographic News.

The skull was found in a location over 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) from the sites in East Africa where the search for human origins has been concentrated. It is also the only relatively complete fossil discovered in a fossil gap of five million years between the ancestral apes of nine million years ago and the australopithecines, or southern apes of Africa, which are generally regarded as close human relatives from four million years onward, said Stringer.

Teeth, Face and Muscle Scars

Brunet and colleagues identified Toumaï as an early hominid based on characteristics such as the tooth type, thickness of the enamel, the shape and position of the head, and facial features.

Wolpoff and colleagues looked at these same features and report in Nature that these features have other explanations and interpretations, leading them to conclude that Toumaï is not a hominid.

For example, when Wolpoff and colleagues look at Toumaï's teeth they see evidence linking the fossil to apes where Brunet and colleagues find evidence linking the fossil to early hominids.

According to the analysis by Brunet and colleagues, the lower canine teeth show no evidence of honing - the sharpening of tooth edges against each other. Non-honing is considered as one of the first hominid features.

However, according to the interpretation of Brunet and colleagues' description of the upper canine teeth, Wolpoff and colleagues see evidence for honing and thus a link to apes.

Brunet, in his reply, says that to interpret the wear on the upper canine as honing is "roughly equivalent to describing an African millet pestle as a Samurai sword." Brunet argues that the tooth in question resembles those of later hominids.

The back and forth between the two groups of researchers extends to other features, such as tooth enamel and facial features.

One of the things that struck the scientific community when Toumaï was revealed to the world was the resemblance of some of Toumaï's facial features to hominids of the genus Homo not known in the fossil record until 1.8 million years ago.

Wolpoff and colleagues write that the brow of Toumaï is hominid-like and not like living apes due to a consequence of mechanics to counter forces during chewing. Brunet and colleagues say the brow is the result of where the face lies relative to the base of the head.

The crux of the argument for Wolpoff and colleagues is that the size and position of the scars on the Toumaï skull left by the neck muscles indicate that Toumaï did not habitually hold its head in an upright position over the spine and was thus not a biped.

"I expect it could hold its head upright; any ape can," said Wolpoff. "What the bone reflects, through the position and size of the scars left by the neck muscles, is that it did not habitually keep its head in that position."

Brunet says that this analysis is based on measurements taken from published photographs of the skull that are distorted. Undistorted, he writes, the evidence left by the neck muscles "is within the range of fossil hominids" and is "nothing like that of any quadrupedal ape."

Given the current patchy state of scientific knowledge about human origins, it is too early for scientists to say where fossils such as Sahelanthrpous and Orrorin lie in relation to the human evolutionary line, according to Stringer.

The Toumaï discovery, he says, demonstrates how much evidence has been missing up to now:

"The earliest stages in the evolution of humans and our closest relatives, the chimpanzees and gorilla, were probably as complex as we see 9 million years ago in the diversity of apes in Europe and Asia, and in the human-like forms 2.5 million years ago in Africa, when nature was seemingly experimenting in how to evolve the first real humans."

MORE (Early Walkers)

Source:
John Roach
for National Geographic News


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