|
ScienceDaily (Feb. 19, 2002) — University
of Toronto anthropologist David Begun
and
his European colleagues are re-writing
the
book on the history of great apes and
humans,
arguing that most of their evolutionary
development
took place in Eurasia, not Africa.
|
Adapted from materials provided by University
Of Toronto. Email or share this story:
Need
to cite this story in your essay, paper,
or report? Use one of the following
formats:
| APA MLA University Of Toronto (2002, February
19). Scientists Look To Europe As Evolutionary
Seat. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 13, 2009, from http://www.sciencedaily.com
/releases/2002/02/020219075535.htm |
David Begun and his collaborators describe
two fossils, both discovered in Europe.
One
comes from the oldest relative of all
living
great apes (orangutans and African
apes)
and humans; the other is the most complete
skull ever found of a close relative
of the
African apes and humans.
In the November 2001 issue, Begun and
colleague
Elmar Heizmann of the Natural History
Museum
of Stuttgart discuss the earliest-known
great
ape fossil, broadly ancestral to all
living
great apes and humans. "Found
in Germany
20 years ago, this specimen is about
16.5
million years old, some 1.5 million
years
older than similar species from East
Africa,"
Begun says. "It suggests that
the great
ape and human lineage first appeared
in Eurasia
and not Africa."
In the December 2001 paper, Begun and
colleague
László Kordos of the Geological Museum
of
Hungary describe the skull of Dryopithecus,
discovered in Hungary by their team
a couple
of years ago. The fossil is identical
to
living great apes in brain size and
very
similar to African apes in the shape
of the
skull and face and in details of the
teeth,
the researchers say.
The discoveries suggest that the early
ancestors
of the hominids (the family of great
apes
and humans) migrated to Eurasia from
Africa
about 17 million years ago, just before
these
two continents were cut off from each
other
by an expansion of the Mediterranean
Sea.
Begun says that the great apes flourished
in Eurasia and that their lineage leading
to the African apes and humans - Dryopithecus
- migrated south from Europe or Western
Asia
into Africa, where populations diverged
into
the lines leading towards great apes,
gorillas
and chimps (chimpanzees and bonobos).
One
of those lines eventually evolved into
the
ancestors of humans about six million
years
ago.
|