July 23, 2012
Rethinking Modern Human Origins
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Modern humans, Homo sapiens, originated in Africa sometime between 200,000 and 100,000 years ago. I’ve written that sentence many times. But what if it’s wrong? Paleoanthropologist Tim Weaver of the University of California, Davis argues there might be another way to interpret our species’ beginnings. Instead of a discrete origin event, he suggests in the Journal of Human Evolution that our ancestors’ arrival into the world might have been a lengthy process that occurred over hundreds of thousands of years.
Current thinking says the lineages leading to modern humans and Neanderthals split 400,000 years ago. And then 200,000 years later, Homo sapiens suddenly appeared in Africa. There’s a lot of evidence that seems to support the idea. The earliest fossils assigned to our species date to this time period. Mitochondrial DNA inherited through the maternal line backs up the fossil evidence. Modern people’s mitochondrial DNA can all be traced back to a common ancestor, an “Eve,” that lived 200,000 years ago.
But Weaver says these lines of evidence can also support an alternative scenario, in which the evolution of our species plays out over hundreds of thousands of years between the split from Neanderthals and the expansion of humans out of Africa 60,000 to 50,000 years ago. He uses genetics and mathematical methods to argue his case.
First, he shows how modern people’s mitochondrial DNA could all appear to converge at 200,000 years ago without being the result of a speciation event or a population bottleneck at that time. It’s possible, he says, to get the same picture of modern mitochondrial DNA if the population of breeding adults stayed constant 400,000 to 50,000 years ago—and if the size of that population equaled the average (called the harmonic mean) population size of the successive generations experiencing a theoretical bottleneck 200,000 years ago.
Next, he builds a model of physical evolution to show how a long process could lead to the arrival of modern human traits at about 200,000 years ago. The model follows several assumptions about the genetic basis of physical traits. Weaver also assumes changes over time in human physical traits were the result of mutation and genetic drift (random change) rather than natural selection. (He notes that differences between Neanderthal and modern human skulls, for example, don’t appear to be the result of natural selection.) By modeling successive generations from 400,000 years ago to the present, with each generation equaling 25 years, Weaver finds modern human traits should have appeared in the fossil record 165,000 years ago. That date becomes 198,000 years ago when the generation length is increased to 30 years or 132,000 years ago when the generation length is decreased to 20 years. What that means is both an abrupt speciation event or a long process could explain why modern humans seem to appear in the fossil record 200,000 years ago.
Weaver’s purpose with this work, however, is not necessarily to prove that modern human origins was a long, drawn out affair. He writes:
At the moment, both discrete event and lengthy process models appear to be compatible with the available evidence. My goal is simply to show that lengthy process models are consistent with current biological evidence and to heighten awareness of the implications of these models for understanding modern human origins.
One of those implications: If it turns out the arrival of humans was a lengthy process, Weaver says, it means nothing “special” happened 200,000 years ago to cause the birth of our species.
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only 2 branches on this tree ?
only 2 branches on this tree ?
?
Richard Dawkins explains the apparent conumdrum of that “mitochondrial Eve” thing in his “Ancestors Tale.” If we use a more personal family tree to make the analogy, for any group of cousins in my extended family, I can name a single person (a couple, actually)* which is the last common ancestor of all of us. Of course, each of us cousins also has other ancestors, but none of these is shared by ALL of the current descendants. So “Eve” was simply one of the population alive at that time, but happened to be the one all the descendants have in common. Interestingly, if a certain one of my distant cousins dies, that last common ancestor might well become someone else–someone more recent.
*["Adam" gets no billing here, since he sperm didn't pass on mitochondrial genes.]
Excellent blog with valuable tips! Thanks for posting.
Erin there should be more pieces like this put out about the sciences.
Too many people assume Science knows all the answers to everything and whenever they’ve had the nerve to question anything they’ve heard they’ve immediately been barked down by some science-rottweiler they’re complete idiots for even daring not to accept what they’re being told.
On the other hand if they’re told the truth (what currently passes for science is only a set of dominating concepts which only brook alternatives with great difficulty meaning they’re perfectly at liberty to question everything they’re asked to learn) then suddenly they start becoming interested again.
[I even managed to talk a girl who'd been convinced by her tutors she was an idiot for not simply accepting what she was told into packing in her dishwasher job and applying for college].
The sort of thing I’m talking about’s exemplified by this need to play down the fact we all seem to be descended from an ‘Eve’?
Clearly this’s down to a fear it might somehow be used to validate religion but maybe ‘religion’ is a presently misunderstood ancient technical language and thus the Biblical story of Eve is merely the ancient’s way of saying much the same thing as we moderns tend to believe.
Afterall the ancients had the same brains and were surrounded by the same world as us.
Richard Dawkins has to be taken with a large grain of salt.
All the chat about human origins is stretched to accommodate the ‘desirable’ theory, namely, an evolutionary explanation that is also ‘out of Africa’. This pleases the multiculturalists and the materialist-atheist camp at the same time.
Even if we find traces of dna that are identical to animals 1 or 2 million years ago, it does not explain the quite unusual DNA that we see right now. Where did it come from?
According to evolutionists, this is the result of the survival of the fittest.
Seems preposterous, but that’s what we’re supposed to believe.
Of course any suggestion of extra-terrestrial involvement is labeled as ‘nuts’.
To me, it’s Richard Dawkins, Ernst Mayr, Stephen Jay Gould and the rest who are the nuts.
Sir,
Our ancestors are plants and vegetations,we were created by nature as we exist,no change has taken place in our body structure since our creation.We are just breed like monkey and donkey,what I saw in nature I want to repeat in your presence.
Wouldn’t it be great to find out that humans have done this several times over since the planet is 4billion years old? Do you really think this is the only time a human type has ever lived here and been this complex and intelligent? does anyone have credible evidence that it hasn’t happened?
Science anyone please! The last two comments demonstrate complete ignorance of, not only the available evidence on this topic, but any systematic understanding of vast regions of science. Question anything you like but science demands you back it up with evidence. If you don’t have any, talk back radio is probably the best place to air your unsubstantiated opinions!
i want to address a few comments on here if i may.
Dianna. No evidence at all supports humans “having happened” more than once. We can follow the fossil record back billions of years, and can date rocks from the formation of earth to get an accurate age and no mammal fossils exist of any kind didn’t exist till around 225 MYA. Given the evidence we have, there is just no possible way evolution happened like this twice.
To Roger, i was going to address your concern, but then i realized you are just an ancient aliens sucker and don’t actually care about real evidence. nothing in the theory of evolution is so questioned that we need to resort to extra terrestrial life, or the supernatural, or any other “weird” causes. The simple fact you are calling mainstream evolutionists the crazy ones speaks volumes to the level of education you have in evolutionary biology…..none.
This is a great post, i really did enjoy it and I am finding myself driven more and more to focus my studies on the origin of homo sapiens. but for me, i really do enjoy my current study of altruism in evolution.
thanks for the post!
“does anyone have credible evidence that it hasn’t happened?” — Dianna, “Comments”
“Can you prove that it didn’t happen?” — Criswell, “Plan 9 From Outer Space”
Yep, Diane, your scenario is on par with Ed Wood’s masterpiece.
Alas, poor alan and Roger! Science has trounced their religious beliefs (quite as an unintended consequence), so they wave their strawmen and rail against the scientists. They have no evidence to submit for their own (unspoken) view of life’s history, but it’s plain that evolution ain’t it.
What do you mean there’s a lot of evidence? There is hardly any evidence. That’s why the problem of understanding our origins is so difficult to solve. Journalists ought to stop leading readers astray with false claims made for sensationalism and sales.