Nature 418, 133 - 135 (2002)
Palaeoanthropology: Hominid revelations from Chad
BERNARD WOOD
Bernard Wood is in the Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, 2110 G Street NW, Washington DC 20052, USA.
e-mail: bwood@gwu.edu
The story of human origins in Africa takes a twist with the description of a 6–7-million-year-old cranium from Chad. The discovery hints at the likely diversity of early hominids.
A single fossil can fundamentally change the way we reconstruct the tree of life. More than 75 years ago, Raymond Dart's description of the Taung skull from southern Africa wrought such a transformation with regard to human evolution. Dart provided hard evidence to support Darwin's prediction that the roots of human evolutionary history run deepest in Africa.
A fossil cranium (Fig. 1 ), discovered by Michel Brunet and his colleagues and described in this issue, marks a similar turning point in our understanding of human origins. Discussion of the cranium and associated fossils is on page 145 (Brunet et al.2), with presentation of the contextual evidence (Vignaud et al.3) on page 152 . The fossils — the cranium, a jaw fragment and several teeth — belong to a primitive human precursor, or hominid, that is an astonishing 6–7 million years old. The transformation wrought here is more nuanced than Dart's, but it is as fundamental. Here we have compelling evidence that our own origins are as complex and as difficult to trace as those of any other group of organisms.
For almost 150 years it has been suggested that modern humans are more closely related to the African apes than they are to the orang-utan. Nowadays, evidence from both bones and teeth, and soft tissues (muscles, nerves, and so on)8, and from molecular and DNA analyses9, 10 , support the view that modern humans and chimpanzees are particularly closely linked. When the DNA differences are calibrated by using palaeontological evidence, they indicate that the hypothetical ancestor of modern humans and the chimpanzee lived between about 5 and 7 million years ago.
Four areas in and around the Chad basin have yielded mammalian fossils, but it is one locality, TM 266, in the oldest of these areas — Toros-Menalla in the Djurab Desert — that provided Brunet's team with the fossils they describe in this issue. The discovery is a tribute to the tenacity of Brunet, Vignaud and their scientific colleagues, and to their intrepid local field team. The sand-laden wind blows incessantly and the fossil layers are difficult to detect: they are at most a few metres thick and a far cry from the banks of sediment that we are used to seeing in pictures of Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, and the like. Yet, despite the harsh present-day environment, the vertebrate fossils are well preserved, and the hominid cranium (designated TM 266-01-060-1) is remarkably complete.
independent evolution took place on the African continent. Four regional 'windows' provide fossil evidence relevant to our early evolutionary history. The southern African window was revealed by Dart in 1925 when the first (and only) hominid fossil from Taung, near Kimberley, was recognized; since then, neighbouring cave sites have provided a rich fossil record that stretches back to around 3–3.5 million years ago. The East African window comprises sites along the Eastern, or Gregory, Rift Valley, from close to the Gulf of Aden in the north to northern Tanzania in the south. The sites are associated with sedimentary basins or the rivers that fed or drained them. Two of them, Middle Awash in Ethiopia and Lukeino in Kenya, have so far provided the oldest evidence of creatures that are plausible human ancestors.
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Absolute — isotope-based — dating methods cannot be applied to the fossil layers at Toros-Menalla because there are no ash layers to provide the necessary argon and potassium. Nor are the sediments suitable for magnetism-based dating methods. Instead, the team matched the rich vertebrate fossil record at TM 266, consisting of examples of 44 different groups, with the equivalent record from sites in East Africa that have absolute dates. The best matches are with two sites in Kenya: the Lukeino Formation of the Tugen Hills (which dates to about 6 million years ago) and the Nawata Formation at Lothagam (5.3–7.4 million years). The upshot is a reliable age estimate of about 6–7 million years for the Toros-Menalla fossils.
The researchers compared their new evidence with what has been published about two other claimants for the title of 'earliest hominid', Ardipithecus ramidus from the Middle Awash12, 13 and Orrorin tugenensis from Lukeino14 . They satisfied themselves (and others, myself included) that the teeth of the new fossils are taxonomically distinctive, and accordingly assigned the fossils to a new species and genus, Sahelanthropus tchadensis.
What was the role of S. tchadensis in the evolution of chimpanzees and modern humans? The latter two look very different, but the differences between the earliest ancestors of chimpanzees and modern humans are likely to have been more subtle. The conventional presumption is that the human–chimp common ancestor, and the earliest members of the chimp lineage, or clade, would have been adapted for life in the trees, with the trunk held either horizontal or upright and with the forelimbs adapted for knuckle-walking on large branches or on the ground. This would have been combined with projecting faces that accommodated elongated jaws bearing relatively small chewing teeth and, in males, large upper canine teeth that would have worn against the lower premolars.
Early hominids at the base of our own clade, in contrast, would have been distinguished by at least some skeletal and other adaptations for an upright posture and bipedal walking and running, linked with a chewing apparatus that combined proportionally larger chewing teeth, modest-sized male canines that wore only at the tip of the crown, and some evidence of an increase in brain size. Against these criteria it is the face, jaw and canines of S. tchadensis that point to its being a hominid, at (or at least close to) the base of the modern human clade.