The leading source for credible citizen reporting

Report Your News
Take the tour...

'Ardi:' 4.4 Million-Year-Old Fossil is Oldest Human Ancestor ( Ardipithecus Ramidus Shows Evolution of Humans and Apes From Common Ancestor)

Arayat : Philippines | about 1 month ago  
Views: 170
  • ardi
    ardi
    Posted by: Jhaszachery
    ardi
  • Original and reconstructed pelvis of the “Ardi” partial skeleton
    Original and reconstructed pelvis of the “Ardi” partial skeleton
    Source: Reuters
  • Scientists from 10 countries participated in Ardi's discovery in Ethiopia's Afar region in 1992
    Scientists from 10 countries participated in Ardi's discovery in ...
    Source: AFP
  • Digitally rendered composite foot of the “Ardi” partial skeleton
    Digitally rendered composite foot of the “Ardi” partial skeleton
    Source: Reuters
  • Digitally rendered composite hand of the “Ardi” partial skeleton
    Digitally rendered composite hand of the “Ardi” partial skeleton
    Source: Reuters
  • Reconstructed lateral view of the skeleton of ARA-VP-6/500 ("Ardi").
    Reconstructed lateral view of the skeleton of ARA-VP-6/500 ("Ardi").
    Source: Reuters
  • An illustration shows a probable life appearance in anterior view of Ardipithecus ramidus ("Ardi"), ARA-VP 6/500
    An illustration shows a probable life appearance in anterior view of ...
    Source: Reuters
  • Ardipithecus provides a link between earlier and later hominins, as seen in this timeline
    Ardipithecus provides a link between earlier and later hominins, as ...
    Source: Reuters
ardi

Scientists today told the world what they know about Ardipithecus ramidus -- "Ardi" for short -- the oldest pre-human species yet found. Ardi lived 4.4 million years ago in what is now Ethiopia.

"This may be the most important specimen in the history of evolutionary biology," said C. Owen Lovejoy, an anthropologist at Kent State University in Ohio, in an interview with ABCNews.com.

Lovejoy was one of more than 40 researchers from around the world who analyzed the Ardi fossils.

Ardi is not the long-sought "missing link" -- the ancestor that scientists say humans and apes have in common -- but comes close. And it helps show that both human beings and apes have evolved from something, about six million years ago, that did not look much like either.

"Six months ago, we would have said our common ancestor looked something like a chimp," said Tim White of the University of California at Berkeley, a senior researcher on the project. "Now all that has changed.

"What we found in Ethiopia at 4.4 million years ago is the closest we've ever come to that ancestor along our own line," White said.

The most complete skeleton, out of more than 30 found, was female, about four feet tall. They discerned the sex from the shape of the pelvis, which was wide enough for her to have borne a baby in her womb.

Walked Upright, but Feet Like a Chimp

The scientists said the fossils show that Ardi walked upright, and that her teeth resemble modern human teeth more closely than they do those of a chimpanzee.

Curiously, though, her feet were capable of grasping, something chimps need in order to climb in trees. She would have been able to climb trees, but she probably did not swing from branches the way modern chimps do.

The back of her skull is small, indicating she had a small brain.

The Ardipithecus bone fragments came from a layer of rock beneath the Afar region of Ethiopia. Afar is now desert, but the scientists said it was woodland 4 million years ago. They found fossilized wood and seeds around the Afar bones.

The fossil hunters, from Ethiopia and the United States, sent the bone fragments they found to a team in Japan. There, 3-D computer models were made of each piece, and the pieces were digitally reassembled, a bit like a jigsaw puzzle.

'Missing Link'? African Fossil Brings Paleontologists Closer

The first fragments were found in 1992, and more in later years. It took this long, said Lovejoy, to put the pieces together so that a detailed description could be published. The results are online in this week's edition of the journal Science.

Ardi 1.2 million years older than Lucy (Australopithecus afarensis), the famous pre-human fossil found in Africa in 1974. Lucy, like Ardi, walked upright and had a small brain, but was clearly closer to modern human beings -- probably not capable, for instance, of climbing routinely in trees.

So what would life have been like for a primitive being more than four million years ago? Scientists say they can deduce a fair amount from Ardi's skull, jaw, hands, legs and pelvis.

The teeth, for instance, suggest that Ardipithecus was probably an omnivore -- eating anything, plant or animal, that it could find. It did not have the pointed teeth found in modern chimpanzees, useful for eating fruit.

Darwin Would Be Pleased

The shape of the large canine teeth in the front of the jaw is important. Male teeth were no larger than females'. It provides clues about social structure, suggesting that the males of the species did not fight each other for the females' attention.

Instead, said Lovejoy, "It is likely that the males went looking for food and brought it back to the females, possibly in return for sex, though that's another story."

He added, "This was probably a species for which male aggressiveness was not something that led to evolutionary success."

Scientists have believed since Charles Darwin's time that apes and human beings have common origins. But they have been hampered by the lack of fossils to trace the evolutionary path.

White and Lovejoy said that is why Ardipithecus is so important.

"This," said Lovejoy, "fills a huge gap."

  • Print
  • Share:
  • Share
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Stumbleupon
News Stories
 >
  • News Source: Uinta County News | about 1 month ago
    The story of humankind is reaching back another million years as scientists learn more about "Ardi," a hominid who lived 4.4 million years ago in what is now Ethiopia. The 110-pound, 4-foot female roamed forests a million years before the famous Lucy,...
  • News Source: SwissInfo | about 1 month ago
    At 4.4 million years old, Ardi, or Ardipithecus ramidus, is one of our oldest ancestors from Africa; she also plays a vital role in understanding how both humans and the great apes have developed. According to extensive research published in the...
  • News Source: Androscoggin News | about 1 month ago
    with massive hands and feet for grabbing onto tree branches: That's the picture that emerges from a recreation of the earliest human ancestor, based on fossil evidence. Gen Suwa, a professor of paleoanthropology at the University Museum of the...
  • News Source: Disinfo.com | about 1 month ago
    Buried among the slew of papers about the new find is one about the creature’s sex life. It makes fascinating reading, especially if you like learning why human females don’t know when they are ovulating, and men lack the clacker-sized testicles...
  • News Source: The Boston Globe | about 1 month ago
    More than a hundred crushed fossil fragments unearthed in Ethiopia have been painstakingly pieced together to reconstruct “Ardi,’’ the earliest skeleton of a prehuman ever found. The discovery provides an extraordinary glimpse into human...
  • News Source: Toronto Star | about 1 month ago
    Joseph Hall Health Reporter Man didn't descend from apes. What is closer to the truth is that our knuckle-dragging cousins descended from us. That's one of the shocking new theories being drawn from a series of anthropology papers published Friday in...
Blogs
 >
  • Blog Source: luishipolito.wordpress.com
    Ardi's feet had yet to develop the arch-like structure that came later with Lucy and on to humans. The hands were more like those of extinct apes. And its very long arms and short legs resembled the proportions of extinct apes, or even monkeys. ....
  • Blog Source: forums.canadiancontent.net
    derived from comparisons with the other apes, and especially chimps, and from. Ardi's younger 'sister' — Lucy, the 3.2-million-year-old specimen of another hominid species, Australopithecus afarensis, discovered in 1974, also in Ethiopia. Lucy's
  • Blog Source: addisportal.com
    Scientists: 'Ardi' Fossil Sheds Light on Origin of Human Species. October 1st, 2009 | by addis portal |. Ardi lived 4.4 million years ago in the woodlands of East Africa. She spent most of her time in the trees. ...
  • Blog Source: blogs.discovermagazine.com
    Ardipithecus: We Meet At Last. submit to reddit. ardi recon440 Meet Ardipithecus. This introduction has been a long time coming. Some 4.4 million years ago, a hominid now known as Ardipithecus ramidus lived in what were then forests in Ethiopia. ....
  • Blog Source: singaporeatheists.blogspot.com
    (Related: Rediscover the original Ardipithecus.) Ardi's Weird Way of Moving. The biggest surprise about Ardipithecus's biology is its bizarre means of moving about. All previously known hominids—members of our ancestral ... Lovejoy sees these
  • Blog Source: johnhawks.net
    Today is Ardipithecus day. Eleven papers in tomorrow's issue of Science describe the research on one exceptional skeleton (numbered ARA-VP-6/500, nicknamed “Ardi”) as well as more than thirty other individuals, mostly represented by isolated
Images
 >
 
Videos
 >
 
Reported by Jhaszachery

Related Allvoices Contributions

Report Your News Got a similar story?
Add it to the network!

Or add related content to this report

Cell phones Cell phones use report code: @4290877

Most Popular Reports

Related Tweets

Related Allvoices Reports

Related People

Contributions

Help and Accounts


Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use Agreement and Privacy Policy.

© Allvoices, Inc 2008-2009. All rights reserved.