The Prague Post - Oldest human relative walked upright 7 mn years ago: study

EUR -
AED 4.265018
AFN 73.164365
ALL 95.984408
AMD 438.161514
ANG 2.078485
AOA 1064.9476
ARS 1644.194061
AUD 1.643978
AWG 2.093314
AZN 1.976241
BAM 1.964688
BBD 2.339183
BDT 142.042616
BGN 1.913476
BHD 0.438345
BIF 3269.169352
BMD 1.161339
BND 1.487228
BOB 8.054021
BRL 6.044998
BSD 1.161414
BTN 107.135694
BWP 15.782587
BYN 3.394758
BYR 22762.244868
BZD 2.335666
CAD 1.578626
CDF 2508.492034
CHF 0.903545
CLF 0.026921
CLP 1062.997138
CNY 8.026131
CNH 8.006854
COP 4370.792324
CRC 552.882256
CUC 1.161339
CUP 30.775484
CVE 110.849219
CZK 24.360278
DJF 206.393051
DKK 7.47108
DOP 70.259233
DZD 152.768643
EGP 61.314287
ERN 17.420085
ETB 182.330711
FJD 2.561507
FKP 0.865868
GBP 0.865285
GEL 3.170779
GGP 0.865868
GHS 12.524983
GIP 0.865868
GMD 84.777707
GNF 10190.75001
GTQ 8.907994
GYD 242.981366
HKD 9.081549
HNL 30.868682
HRK 7.531981
HTG 152.153117
HUF 387.724069
IDR 19617.338792
ILS 3.602578
IMP 0.865868
INR 107.385304
IQD 1520.773452
IRR 1534012.71618
ISK 145.09754
JEP 0.865868
JMD 181.943917
JOD 0.823385
JPY 183.378336
KES 150.156059
KGS 101.559174
KHR 4662.776229
KMF 493.569554
KPW 1045.204775
KRW 1708.863903
KWD 0.357286
KYD 0.967887
KZT 578.346502
LAK 24777.168142
LBP 103997.909634
LKR 361.719573
LRD 212.525118
LSL 19.208356
LTL 3.429132
LVL 0.702482
LYD 7.415117
MAD 10.926748
MDL 20.127231
MGA 4854.397313
MKD 61.613196
MMK 2438.894557
MNT 4144.927437
MOP 9.349858
MRU 46.581564
MUR 53.595493
MVR 17.942852
MWK 2016.670191
MXN 20.551009
MYR 4.58383
MZN 74.221197
NAD 19.209044
NGN 1623.830144
NIO 42.632671
NOK 11.149122
NPR 171.417511
NZD 1.959818
OMR 0.446539
PAB 1.161455
PEN 4.05133
PGK 5.011171
PHP 68.884814
PKR 324.420344
PLN 4.249049
PYG 7473.876987
QAR 4.228427
RON 5.09677
RSD 117.425337
RUB 90.875244
RWF 1697.996542
SAR 4.359873
SBD 9.343184
SCR 15.774659
SDG 697.39312
SEK 10.622495
SGD 1.481259
SHP 0.871305
SLE 28.481821
SLL 24352.697907
SOS 663.709652
SRD 43.74416
STD 24037.37306
STN 25.026856
SVC 10.162062
SYP 128.420772
SZL 19.208617
THB 36.883826
TJS 11.131774
TMT 4.064687
TND 3.39095
TOP 2.796226
TRY 51.19705
TTD 7.880653
TWD 36.950358
TZS 2996.254949
UAH 51.041457
UGX 4372.782945
USD 1.161339
UYU 46.460593
UZS 14185.75567
VES 502.42505
VND 30517.0862
VUV 138.634464
WST 3.182637
XAF 658.938108
XAG 0.013282
XAU 0.000226
XCD 3.138577
XCG 2.09317
XDR 0.823103
XOF 657.317509
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.095098
ZAR 18.975461
ZMK 10453.442713
ZMW 22.445546
ZWL 373.950692
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.16

    -0.17%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    16.7

    -1.8%

  • GSK

    1.0000

    55.51

    +1.8%

  • CMSC

    0.0350

    23.22

    +0.15%

  • BCC

    -0.8600

    74.49

    -1.15%

  • RIO

    0.1400

    90.35

    +0.15%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    90.41

    +0.61%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    25.88

    -0.7%

  • RELX

    0.0000

    35.68

    0%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    14.48

    -0.21%

  • AZN

    0.7300

    194.95

    +0.37%

  • BP

    0.2100

    40.65

    +0.52%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    58.33

    +0.79%

Oldest human relative walked upright 7 mn years ago: study
Oldest human relative walked upright 7 mn years ago: study / Photo: JACQUES DEMARTHON - AFP/File

Oldest human relative walked upright 7 mn years ago: study

The earliest known human ancestor walked on two feet as well as climbing through trees around seven million years ago, scientists said Wednesday after studying three limb bones.

Text size:

When the skull of Sahelanthropus tchadensis was discovered in Chad in 2001, it pushed back the age of the oldest known representative species of humanity by a million years.

Nicknamed "Toumai", the nearly complete cranium was thought to indicate that the species walked on two feet because of the position of its vertebral column and other factors.

However the subject triggered fierce debate among scientists, partly due to the scarcity and quality of the available bones, with some even claiming that Toumai was not a human relative but just an ancient ape.

In a study published in the Nature journal on Wednesday, a team of researchers exhaustively analysed a thigh bone and two forearm bones found at the same site as the Toumai skull.

"The skull tells us that Sahelanthropus is part of the human lineage," said paleoanthropologist Franck Guy, one of the authors of the study.

The new research on the limb bones demonstrates that walking on two feet was its "preferred mode of getting around, depending on the situation," he told a press conference.

But they also sometimes moved through the trees, he added.

- 'Not a magical trait' -

The leg and arm bones were found alongside thousands of other fossils in 2001, and the researchers were not able to confirm that they belonged to the same individual as the Toumai skull.

After years of testing and measuring the bones, they identified 23 characteristics which were then compared to fossils from great apes as well as hominins -- which are species more closely related to humans than chimpanzees.

They concluded that "these characteristics are much closer to what would be seen in a hominin than any other primate," the study's lead author Guillaume Daver told the press conference.

For example, the forearm bones did not show evidence that the Sahelanthropus leaned on the back of its hands, as is done by gorillas and chimpanzees.

The Sahelanthropus lived in an area with a combination of forests, palm groves and tropical savannahs, meaning that being able to both walk and climb through trees would have been an advantage.

There have been previous suggestions that it was the ability to walk on two feet that drove humans to evolve separately from chimpanzees, putting us on the path to where we are today.

However the researchers emphasised that what made Sahelanthropus human was its ability to adapt to its environment.

"Bipedalism (walking on two legs) is not a magical trait that strictly defines humanity," paleontologist Jean-Renaud Boisserie told the press conference.

"It is a characteristic that we find at the present time in all the representatives of humanity."

- Our 'bushy' family tree -

Paleoanthropologist Antoine Balzeau of France's National Museum of Natural History said the "extremely substantial" study gives "a more complete image of Toumai and therefore of the first humans".

It also bolstered the theory that the human family tree is "bushy", and was not like the "simplistic image of humans who follow one another, with abilities that improve over time," Balzeau, who was not involved in the research, told AFP.

Daniel Lieberman, a professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University, said in a linked paper in Nature that the study's "authors have squeezed as much information as possible from the fossil data".

But he added that the research will not offer "full resolution" of the debate.

Milford Wolpoff, a paleoanthropologist at the US University of Michigan cast doubt on whether Toumai is a hominin, telling AFP that "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence".

Wednesday's study was carried out by researchers from the PALEVOPRIM paleontology institute, a collaboration between France's CNRS research centre and Poitiers University, as well as scientists in Chad.

Guy said the team hopes to continue its research in Chad next year -- "security permitting".

Chadian paleontologist Clarisse Nekoulnang said the team was "trying to find sites older than that of Toumai".

X.Vanek--TPP