Scientist:
Human Origin Impossible to Pinpoint
By
Jeanna Bryner, LiveScience Staff Writer
All
modern humans originated in sub-Saharan Africa, according to a new study touted
by its funders as the final blow against an opposing viewpoint. Not
so fast, says one anthropologist who finds flaws in the evidence.
Debate
over the origins of modern humans has simmered among anthropologists for years,
with one theory asserting that Homo sapiens migrated across the world from a single
point in Africa. The other theory states that multiple populations of Homo sapiens
independently evolved from Homo erectus in regions beyond Africa.
The
new study, published in the July 19 issue of the journal Nature, delivers what
the researchers say could be the final verdict in support of the single point
"Out of Africa" theory.
We
have combined our genetic data with new measurements of a large sample of skulls
to show definitively that modern humans originated from a single area in sub-Saharan
Africa, said lead researcher Andrea Manica of the University of Cambridge.
Out
of Africa
Manica
and colleagues took multiple measurements of more than 4,500 male fossil skulls
from 105 populations around the globe. They combined the results with data from
studies of global genetic variations in humans, finding that both genetic and
skull variability decreased with distance from Africa. So populations in southeastern
Africa held the highest variability compared with populations in other countries.
Humans
seem to have poured out of Africa, spread out across the world, but at a really
quite uniform rate such that you get this lovely gradual loss of diversity,
said study team member William Amos of the University of Cambridge.
The
results held even when the scientists accounted for climate, since climate conditions
can lead to changes in skull features. In very cold climates you tend to
generate a slightly thicker brow ridge. Whether or not thats to keep horrible
blizzards out of your eyes, I dont know, Amos said.
Past
studies based on skull morphology have been weak and have supported both of the
human-origin views.
This
study adds a strong line of evidence to the Out of Africa [hypothesis] using
such morphology, said paleontologist Will Harcourt-Smith of the American
Museum of Natural History in New York. Harcourt-Smith was not involved in the
current research.
Dissenting
voice
However,
John Hawks of the University of Wisconsin-Madison says the paper is mistaken.
A major flaw is that the current research is largely based on skull variability.
You
cant find the origin of people by measuring the variability of their skulls,
Hawks told LiveScience.
Differences
in skull features are related to genetics, and genetic variation depends on how
much mixing occurs with other populations. The main problem with the paper
is that it takes some assumptions from genetics papers of 10 to 15 years ago that
we now know are wrong, Hawks said.
Other
scenarios, besides the single-origin theory, could account for the link between
distance and skull variability. Africa is ecologically diverse, and cranial
variation is a function of environments, he said. In environments supporting
hardy foods such as roots, people would need bigger jaw muscles, and thus larger
areas for muscle attachments.
Also,
correcting for climate is not a good idea, according to Hawks. The most
important feature that is related to climate is skull size. So by correcting for
climate, they are subtracting a major component of variability," he said.
Impossible
to solve?
In
his own research, Hawks is finding that natural selection has led to changes in
thousands of genes during only the past few thousand years.
Im
really thinking just the opposite of this paper, Hawks said. There
are differences in the skull between populations, including their variability,
but it is mostly due to very recent effects and not the origin of modern humans.
At
the end of the day, a resolution to the "Out of Africa" debate may be
impossible, he said. Most of the evidence can be interpreted as supporting both
human-origins theories. Its really hard to find observations that
distinguish the two, Hawks said.
The
multiregional idea is identical to the recent African origin idea, except for
its prediction that Europeans and Asians were part of the single population of
origin and didnt become extinct.
Finding
an answer still intrigues paleontologists. To know the manner in which our
direct ancestors evolved from earlier hominins, as well as which species died
out and which didn't, Harcourt-Smith said, provides us with an insight
into the actual process of human evolution.
The
recent study was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research
Council (BBSRC).