Home » Health » Ancient Chinese Skull Rewrites Human Evolution Timeline

Ancient Chinese Skull Rewrites Human Evolution Timeline

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor
video-embed">

A roughly 1-million-year-old Chinese hominid ⁢skull has long vexed efforts to nail down its evolutionary identity.

Fossil comparisons using a new​ digital reconstruction of this specimen, dubbed the Yunxian 2 skull, indicate that it belonged to an early member of an Asian hominid ​line that culminated in a ‌now-extinct species called A person longresearchers⁤ report in the Sept. 25 Science. The reconstructed skull corrects features that were partially crushed​ while buried, say paleoanthropologist Xiaobo Feng of ⁣Shanxi University in Taiyuan, China, and colleagues.

Feng’s team regards‍ its new findings as a framework‌ for rethinking how a confusing array of Middle Pleistocene hominid fossils, dating from about 789,000⁢ to 130,000 years ago, fit into human ​evolution. In a novel twist, the ‍scientists’ results suggest that an ancient line ‍of hominids leading directly to ​ Homo sapiens possessed ⁢a slightly closer evolutionary relationship to H. long and its ancestors, including Yunxian 2, than to neandertals. Their findings also ‌portray Denisovans, for‍ the first time, as members​ of ‍ H. long and thus closer relatives⁤ of H. sapiens ​than‌ of Neandertals.

But longstanding debates about how human evolution played ‍out will undoubtedly continue.​ While it’s exciting to ⁢have a corrected version of Yunxian 2,Middle Pleistocene evolution represents an enduring mystery,says⁣ paleoanthropologist Sheela Athreya of Texas A&M university in College Station.

Yunxian 2 and other Homo ⁤fossils display varying sets of skeletal traits that cannot easily be ⁤sorted into distinct lineages, says Athreya, who did not participate in⁢ the new study.‍ For now, she says, Denisovans and their relationship ⁤to Yunxian 2 ⁢and proposed H. long ‍fossils remain poorly understood.

Feng and colleagues disagree. In their view, H. ‍long includes China’s 146,000-year-old Harbin ‍skullnicknamed Dragon ​Man,⁢ several other Chinese fossils near the Harbin skull’s age and Denisovans, an Asian population known more from ancient DNA than ⁢ fossil finds.

Excavations in 1989 at the Yunxian site on a⁤ riverbank in central⁣ China produced a badly ⁢crushed Yunxian 1 skull, which has proven challenging to reconstruct. Further digging uncovered Yunxian 2 in 1990 and Yunxian 3 in⁤ 2022. the last find awaits a published description.

Previously dated reversals of Earth’s magnetic field ‍recorded in sediment layers and bones‍ of extinct animals found near the Yunxian skulls enabled an estimate of their age.

Given the Yunxian 2 skull’s age of ‍around 1 million years‌ and its unusual mix of skeletal traits,the scientists refrained from assigning the Chinese ⁢fossil ‍to H. long or any other ‍ Homo species. One notable skeletal curiosity of Yunxian 2 ⁣consists of a long, low braincase⁢ that nonetheless held a relatively large brain. But some traits, such as ⁣narrowly spaced eye sockets and a wide, flat nasal opening, link⁣ Yunxian 2 to H. longthe researchers say.

To work out Yunxian 2’s lineage,⁤ Feng’s group sorted it and 104 other hominid skull and jaw specimens‌ from africa, Asia and Europe into anatomically similar groups. A computer analysis identified H.⁤ long, H. sapiens and Neandertal lineages by generating evolutionary trees that most simply and directly explained distributions of different skeletal traits. In this way, the⁢ timing of‍ common ancestors for these lineages was ⁢calculated.

Steps in the digital reconstruction of the Yunxian 2⁤ skull, shown from left to right, resulted in a depiction of what researchers consider the fossil’s likely original appearance.Xijun NiSteps in the digital reconstruction of the Yunxian⁣ 2 skull, shown‌ from left to right, resulted in ‌a depiction of what researchers consider the fossil’s likely original appearance.Xijun ​Ni

H. longi’s evolutionary predecessors, including ⁣the Yunxian 2 individual, shared a common ancestor around 1.32 million ‍years ago with a lineage later capped off by ⁢ H. sapiensthe scientists calculate. That estimate builds ​on recent DNA ⁢analyses indicating that⁤ two ancestral​ populations of people today split as early as around 1.5 million years ago.

European fossils classified by some researchers as​ HOMO ⁤predecessordated at between 900,000 and 800,000 years‍ oldalso qualify as members of the H. ⁢long ​lineage, ‌Feng and​ colleagues say.

Feng’s ⁢group calculates that the first members ‍of a separate line of Neandertal ancestors emerged about 1.38 million years ago.⁣ If so,⁢ members of the H. sapiens lineage had closer evolutionary ties to H. long ancestors than to the Neandertal lineage.

If the Yunxian 2 skull ⁣provides a glimpse of Homo anatomy shortly after the origins of both the H. long and H. sapiens ‍ lineages, “it may represent one of the most important windows into evolutionary processes that ⁢shaped our genus,” says paleoanthropologist and study coauthor Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum in London.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.