Thursday, September 10, 2015

New Species Of Human Discovered In Cave Near Johannesburg-Homo Naledi



September 10, 2015 1:27 pm

Homo naledi, a new species of human, is discovered in South Africa

A hand out image made available by the University of the Witwatersrand, shows Crania of Homo Naledi are pictured in the Wits bone vault at the Evolutionary Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, on September 7, 2015. The fossils are among nearly 1,700 bones and teeth retrieved from a nearly inaccessible cave near Johannesburg. The fossil trove was created, scientists believe, by Homo naledi repeatedly secreting the bodies of their dead companions in the cave. Analysis of the fossils -- part of a project known as the Rising Star Expedition -- was led in part by paleoanthropologist John Hawks, professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. AFP PHOTO/HO/ WITS UNIVERSITY/JOHN HAWKS
==RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO/HO/ WITS UNIVERSITY/JOHN HAWKS" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENT - AFP IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DIGITAL ALTERATIONS TO THE PICTURE'S EDITORIAL CONTENT, DATE AND LOCATION ==JOHN HAWKS/AFP/Getty Images©AFP
Deep within a South African cave palaeontologists have found a burial chamber full of bones of primitive humans previously unknown to science.
The hominids seem to have placed the bodies of their deceased there over many years — the first time such a ritual practice has been observed in a species other than our own Homo sapiens and Neanderthals.
The remarkable discovery of Homo naledi, as the new species is called, was announced at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and associated press briefings in the UK. Details of the fossils, which are an extraordinary mosaic of primitive and modern features, are published in eLife and National Geographic.
An international team of 60 scientists has worked intensively on characterising the bones of 15 individuals removed from the Rising Star cave 50km from Johannesburg since the initial discovery in 2013.
“With almost every bone in the body represented multiple times, Homo naledi is already practically the best-known fossil member of our lineage,” said professor Lee Berger, the project leader. The species is named after its discovery site; naledi means star in the local Sesotho language.
Yet many mysteries remain — above all, the age of the fossils. The usual geological dating techniques have not yet given a result, leaving open the possibility that Homo naledi might have lived as long as 2.5m years ago or at the other extreme just tens of thousands of years ago.
“Homo naledi is similar to modern humans in some ways, such as the shape of its hands, wrist and feet,” said Professor Chris Stringer, head of human origins research at the Natural History Museum in London. “On the other hand, Homo naledi’s small brain [just a third the size of an adult brain today] and the shape of its upper body are more reminiscent of prehuman and very early human species such as Homo habilis, which lived more than 1.5m years ago.
“Based on these features, Homo naledi could be one of the earliest species of human yet discovered, or a species that retained many features from an earlier stage of human evolution,” Prof Stringer added.

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An undated photo provided by the Cleveland Museum of Natural History shows casts of fossil jaw fragments and teeth of "Australopithecus deyiremeda". The fossil find in Ethiopia adds another twig to the human evolutionary tree, giving further evidence that the well-known "Lucy" species had company, researchers say. In a paper released Wednesday, May 27, 2015, by the journal Nature, Yohannes Haile-Selassie of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History and colleagues announce the new find and assigned it to a species they dubbed, Australopithecus deyiremeda . In the Afar language the second name means "close relative," referring to its apparent relationship to later members of the evolutionary tree. (Laura Dempsey\Cleveland Museum of Natural History via AP)
Discoveries reveal many more branches of the ancient human family tree, writes Anjana Ahuja
The fossils — of babies, children, young and old adults — lay in an isolated chamber 90 metres from the cave entrance. In contrast to all other hominid archaeological sites discovered so far, there were no animal fossils associated with the bones, which bore no marks of carnivores, scavengers or natural processes such as running water that might have carried the Homo naledi remains into the cave.
“We explored every alternative scenario, including mass death, an unknown carnivore, water transport from another location or accidental death in a death trap, among others,” said Prof Berger.
“In [rejecting] every other option, we were left with intentional body disposal by Homo naledi as the most plausible scenario.”
This “ritualised behaviour”, as the palaeontologists call it, means repeated activity and does not necessarily imply any religious context. The hominids may have wanted to dispose of their death in an isolated cave for practical reasons such as hygiene.
Because the 18cm opening into the cave is so narrow, much of the excavation was carried out by six slim women who responded to Prof Berger’s call on social media for “underground astronauts” willing and able to squeeze through the hole. Prof Berger pointed out that much more is left to be discovered in the Rising Star cave.
“This chamber has not given up all of its secrets,” he said. “There are potentially hundreds if not thousands of remains of Homo naledi still down there.”

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