By
MATTHEW FORDAHL
AP Science Writer
MARCH 23, 01:14 EST
Early humans probably moved
around by leaning on their knuckles much like today's gorillas and
chimpanzees, according to a new fossil analysis that could redefine
mankind's family tree.
For decades, anthropologists
have considered upright walking, or bipedalism, a defining characteristic
of human lineage. Knuckle-walking was thought to have evolved uniquely in
apes after humans had taken a separate evolutionary path.
But in an article in today's
issue of the journal Nature, researchers said they found fossil evidence
that two species of early humans descended from knuckle-walkers.
"Instead
of coming down out of the trees and walking upright, the ancestors of
early upright walkers were already adapted to a life on the ground,'' said
Brian Richmond, an anthropologist at George Washington University in
Washington, D.C., and a co-author of the study.
In the two fossils studied,
both of them hominids that walked upright more than 3 million years ago,
the researchers found structures in the wrist bones that once could have
supported knuckle-walking by restricting movement of the wrist.
The researchers believe
those wrist structures were traits left over from distant ancestors, much
like the tail bone or appendix.
The study's findings also
challenge theories of a special chimpanzee-gorilla relationship, which was
based on the fact that they are the only primates to exhibit the unusual
way of walking, Richmond said.
"We
showed the ancestor that gave rise to upright walkers and humans was a
knuckle-walker,'' he said. "That means it's shared between the
ancestors of humans and chimpanzees and gorillas.''
The newly analyzed fossils
belong to Australpithecus anamensis and Australopithecus afarensis, known
as Lucy. Both lived in Africa between 4.1 million and 3 million years ago
— at least a million years after the evolutionary split from apes.
Richmond and colleague David
Strait, who compared existing fossils with the bones of today's apes,
predict a hominid from 5 million years ago will show evidence of actual
knuckle-walking.
"We
didn't actually find fossils from this critical time period,'' Richmond
said. "We found for the first time echoes of the earlier ancestor in
the earliest human fossils that we currently have.''
Today's chimps and gorillas
as well as the early human fossils have a bony projection from their
forearms that the wrist locked into, preventing it from moving back more
than 30 degrees.
"The
reason that chimpanzees and gorillas have this very stiff wrist is that if
you're walking on your knuckles, you don't want your wrist to collapse
from the weight of the body,'' Richmond said.
Other scientists praised the
research, which appears to resolve a long-standing debate over genetic
tests that show a close evolutionary relationship between chimps and
humans even though it was not supported by fossils.
"We
are more closely related to chimps than either of us is to gorillas, yet
they share the same specialization that doesn't appear in our ancestry,''
said John Fleagle, a professor of anatomical science at State University
of New York at Stony Brook. "The simple solution is that a common
ancestor was a knuckle-walker, but the fossil record doesn't seem to jibe
with that.''
The new research shows that
at least some early humans had that unique trait.
"If
the anatomical analyses are shown to be correct, I think it's a hugely
important breakthrough in our understanding of early bipedalism,'' said
Craig Stanford, a University of Southern California biological
anthropologist. |