Monday, June 6, 2011

A New Twist in human evolution? (Nature)

Human ancestors in Eurasia earlier than thought

Stone fragments found in Georgia suggest Homo erectus might have evolved outside Africa.
homo erectusA new find has muddied the water on the origins of Homo erectus.photolibrary.com
Archaeologists have long thought that Homo erectus, humanity's first ancestor to spread around the world, evolved in Africa before dispersing throughout Europe and Asia. But evidence of tool-making at the border of Europe and Asia is challenging that assumption.

Reid Ferring, an anthropologist at the University of North Texas in Denton, and his colleagues excavated the Dmanisi site in the Caucasus Mountains of Georgia. They found stone artefacts — mostly flakes that were dropped as hominins knapped rocks to create tools for butchering animals — lying in sediments almost 1.85 million years old.

Until now, anthropologists have thought that H. erectusevolved between 1.78 million and 1.65 million years ago — after the Dmanisi tools would have been made.

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