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October 16, 2015

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Human teeth find could rewrite mankind’s story

HUMAN teeth discovered in central China provide evidence that our species left the African continent up to 70,000 years earlier than prevailing theories suggest, according to the latest study.

Homo sapiens reached present-day China 80,000-120,000 years ago, according to the study, which could redraw the migration map for modern humans.

“The model that is generally accepted is that modern humans left Africa only 50,000 years ago,” said Maria Martinon-Torres, a researcher at University College London and a co-author of the study.

“In this case, we are saying the H. sapiens is out of Africa much earlier,” she told the peer-reviewed journal Nature, which published the study yesterday.

While the route they traveled remains unknown, previous research suggests the most likely path out of East Africa to east Asia was across the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East.

The findings also mean that the first truly modern humans — thought to have emerged in east Africa some 200,000 years ago — landed in China well before they went to Europe.

There is no evidence to suggest that H. sapiens entered the European continent earlier than 45,000 years ago, at least 40,000 years after they showed up in present-day China.

The 47 teeth exhumed from a knee-deep layer of grey, sandy clay inside Fuyan Cave in Daoxian County, Hunan Province, closely resemble those of “contemporary humans,” according to the study.

They could only have come from a population that migrated from Africa, rather than one that evolved from an another species of early man such as the extinct Homo erectus, the authors said.

The scientists also unearthed the remains of some 38 mammals, including specimens of five extinct species, one of them a giant panda larger than those in existence today. No tools were found.

“Judging by the cave environment, it may not have been a living place for humans,” lead author Liu Wu from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing told reporters.

The study also rewrites the timeline of early man in China.

Up to now, the earliest proof of H. sapiens east of the Arabian Peninsula came from the Tianyuan Cave near Beijing, and dated from no more than 40,000 years ago.

The new discovery raises questions about why it took so long for H. sapiens to find their way to nearby Europe.

“Why is it that modern humans — who were already at the gates — didn’t really get into Europe?,” Martinon-Torres asked.

Liu and colleagues have two theories.

The first is the intimidating presence of Neanderthal man. While this species of early human eventually died out, they were spread across the European continent up until at least some 50,000 years ago.

“The classic idea is that H. sapiens ... took over the Neanderthal empire, but maybe Neanderthals were a kind of ecological barrier, and Europe was too small a place” for both, Martinon-Torres said.

Another impediment might have been the cold.

Up until the Ice Age ended 12,000 years ago, ice sheets stretched across a good part of the European continent, a forbidding environment for a new species emerging from the relative warmth of East Africa. “H. sapiens originated in or near the tropics, so it makes sense that the species’ initial dispersal was eastwards rather than northwards, where winter temperatures rapidly fell below freezing,” Robin Dennell of the University of Exeter said in a commentary, also in Nature.

Martinon-Torres laid out some of the questions to be addressed in future research, using both genetics and fossil records. “What are the origins of these populations, and what was their fate? Did they vanish? Could they be the ancestors of later and current populations that entered Europe?”

She also suggested there might have been “different movements and migrations” out of Africa, not just one.

Besides the prehistoric panda, called Ailuropoda baconi, the scientists found an extinct species of a giant spotted hyaena. An elephant-like creature called Stegodon orientalis and a giant tapir, also present, were species that may have survived into the era when the Chinese had developed writing, some 3,500 years ago.

The cache of teeth nearly went unnoticed. Liu and his Chinese colleagues discovered the cave — and its menagerie of long-deceased animals — in the 1980s, but had no inkling it also contained human remains. But, 25 years later, while revisiting the site, Liu had a hunch.

“By thinking about the cave environment, we realized that human fossils might be found there,” he said. “So we started a five-year excavation.”




 

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