كينيا: العثور على بقايا بشرية تتحدى نظرية التطور

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08-10-2007, 11:46 PM

عبدالغني بريش فيوف
<aعبدالغني بريش فيوف
تاريخ التسجيل: 12-01-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 1998

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كينيا: العثور على بقايا بشرية تتحدى نظرية التطور

    كينيا: العثور على بقايا بشرية تتحدى نظرية التطور
    سي.ان.ان
    GMT 22:30:00 2007 الخميس 9 أغسطس
    واشنطن: قلبت نظرية علمية حديثة قائمة على تحليل بقايا ومستحثات بشرية تعود إلى عصور ما قبل التاريخ نظرية التطور الطبيعي التقليدية رأساً على عقب، وأكدت أن البشر هم حصيلة تطور سلالات مختلفة، تعايشت خلال العصور الغابرة. وقالت الدكتورة ميفي ليكي أنها عثرت على أدلة تؤكد تعايش نوعين من السلالات البشرية في نفس الوقت في كينيا، يما يتناقض مع نظرية النشوء التقليدية التي تفترض وجود جذر سلالي مشترك واحد للبشر.
    فالنظرية القديمة هي أن أقدم نوع من البشر وهو "الهومو هابيلس" Homo-Habilis تطور إلى "الهومو ايريكتوس" Homo-erectus وثم تطور إلى الإنسان الحديث أو "الهومو سابينس" Homo-sapiens. ولكن اكتشاف ليكي يبيّن أن النوعين الأولين عاشا بشكل متزامن قبل ما يقارب 1.5 مليون سنة، بأجزاء من كينيا، لمدة تقارب نصف مليون سنة، وقد نشرت ليكي هذا التقرير الخميس عبر "مجلة الطبيعة."
    ويأتي هذا الاستنتاج بعد فحوصات وتحقيقات استمرت سبعة أعوام، وتركزت على جمجمة كاملة تابعة لإنسان "الهومو ايريكتوس" وجدت عام 2000 على مقربة من بقايا أخرى تعود للفك العلوي من جمجمة إنسان "الهومو هابيلس."
    وبينت الدراسات التي تناولت عمر البقايا أن هذه الفصائل عاشت في أوقات متزامنة، الأمر الذي يتناقض وفرضية أن يكون أحدهما نتاج تطور الآخر، وفقاً لأسوشيتد برس.
    وفي هذا السياق، رجح أستاذ علم التطور التشريحي بجامعة لندن، فرد سبور، أن تكون تلك الأنواع البشرية قد تعايشت بجوار بعضها دون اختلاط أو احتكاك، مما سمح لكل منها بالتطور بشكل منفصل، وشبه ذلك بالعلاقة بين فصائل الشمبانزي والقرود، التي تتعايش في منطقة واحدة بشكل مستقل.
    وأبدى سبور اعتقاده أن "الهومو هابيلس" كانوا نباتيين، فيما أقبل "الهومو ايريكتوس" على تناول اللحوم، ورجح وجود جذور مشتركة قديمة لتلك الفصائل، تعود إلى ما قبل مليونين أو ثلاثة ملايين عام وهي فترة غامضة بالنسبة للعلماء نظراً لعدم وجود أي بقايا تساعد على فهمها.
    من جهته، أثني مدير العلوم بمعهد أصل البشر بجامعة أريزونا، بيل كيمبل، على الاكتشاف، وقال إن البيانات المتوفرة حول تاريخ البشر باتت عرضة للتعديل بشكل دائم، واعتبر أن أهمية نتائج التقرير توازي أهمية الأبحاث التي أكدت أن فصائل "الهومو سابينس" و"نيندرثالز" Neanderthals تعايشت خلال العصور السحيقة.
                  

08-10-2007, 11:52 PM

عبدالغني بريش فيوف
<aعبدالغني بريش فيوف
تاريخ التسجيل: 12-01-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 1998

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Re: كينيا: العثور على بقايا بشرية تتحدى نظرية التطور (Re: عبدالغني بريش فيوف)

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08-10-2007, 11:59 PM

عبدالغني بريش فيوف
<aعبدالغني بريش فيوف
تاريخ التسجيل: 12-01-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 1998

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Re: كينيا: العثور على بقايا بشرية تتحدى نظرية التطور (Re: عبدالغني بريش فيوف)



    Fossil shakes evolutionary tree

    Article published Aug 8, 2007

    By Seth Borenstein - WASHINGTON (AP) – Surprising fossils dug up in Africa are creating messy kinks in the iconic straight line of human evolution with its knuckle-dragging ape and briefcase-carrying man.

    The new research by famed paleontologist Maeve Leakey in Kenya shows our family tree is more like a wayward bush with stubby branches, calling into question the evolution of our ancestors.

    The old theory was that the first and oldest species in our family tree, Homo habilis, evolved into Homo erectus, which then became us, Homo sapiens. But those two earlier species lived side-by-side about 1.5 million years ago in parts of Kenya for at least half a million years, Leakey and colleagues report in a paper to be published in the journal Nature tomorrow.

    In 2000 Leakey found an old H. erectus complete skull within walking distance of an upper jaw of the H. habilis, and both dated from the same general time period. That makes it unlikely that H. erectus evolved from H. habilis, researchers said.

    It's the equivalent of finding that your grandmother and great-grandmother were sisters rather than mother-daughter, said study co-author Fred Spoor, a professor of evolutionary anatomy at the University College in London.

    The two species lived near each other, but probably didn't interact with each other, each having their own "ecological niche," Spoor said. Homo habilis was likely more vegetarian and Homo erectus ate some meat, he said. Like chimps and apes, "they'd just avoid each other, they don't feel comfortable in each other's company," he said.

    They have some still-undiscovered common ancestor that probably lived 2 million to 3 million years ago, a time that has not left much fossil record, Spoor said.

    Overall what it paints for human evolution is a "chaotic kind of looking evolutionary tree rather than this heroic march that you see with the cartoons of an early ancestor evolving into some intermediate and eventually unto us," Spoor said in a phone interview from a field office of the Koobi Fora Research Project in northern Kenya.

    That old evolutionary cartoon, while popular with the general public, keeps getting proven wrong and too simple, said Bill Kimbel, who praised the latest findings. He is science director of the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University and wasn't involved in the research team.

    "The more we know, the more complex the story gets," he said. Scientists used to think H. sapiens evolved from Neanderthals, he said, but now know that both species lived during the same time period and that we did not come from Neanderthals.

    Leakey's team spent seven years analyzing the fossils before announcing their findings that it was time to redraw the family tree – and rethink other ideas about human evolutionary history, especially about our most immediate ancestor, H. erectus.

    Because the H. erectus skull Leakey recovered was much smaller than others, scientists had to first prove that it was erectus and not another species nor a genetic freak. The jaw, probably from an 18- or 19-year-old female, was adult and showed no signs of any type of malformations or genetic mutations, Spoor said. The scientists also know it isn't H. habilis from several distinct features on the jaw.

    That caused researchers to re-examine the 30 other erectus skulls they have and the dozens of partial fossils. They realized that the females of that species are much smaller than the males – something different from modern man, but similar to other animals, said study co-author Susan Anton, a New York University anthropologist. Scientists hadn't looked carefully enough before to see that there was a distinct difference in males and females.

    Difference in size between males and females seem to be related to monogamy, the researchers said. Primate species that have same-sized males and females, such as gibbons, tend to be more monogamous. Species that are not monogamous, such as gorillas and baboons, have much bigger males.

    This suggests that our ancestor H. erectus reproduced with multiple partners.

    The H. habilis jaw was dated at 1.44 million years ago. That is the youngest ever found from a species that scientists originally figured died off somewhere between 1.7 and 2 million years ago, Spoor said. It enabled scientists to say that H. erectus and H. habilis lived at the same time.

    All the changes to human evolutionary thought should not be considered a weakness in the theory of evolution, Kimbel said. Rather, those are the predictable results of getting more evidence, asking smarter questions and forming better theories, he said.

    By Seth Borenstein - WASHINGTON (AP) – Surprising fossils dug up in Africa are creating messy kinks in the iconic straight line of human evolution with its knuckle-dragging ape and briefcase-carrying man.

    The new research by famed paleontologist Maeve Leakey in Kenya shows our family tree is more like a wayward bush with stubby branches, calling into question the evolution of our ancestors.

    The old theory was that the first and oldest species in our family tree, Homo habilis, evolved into Homo erectus, which then became us, Homo sapiens. But those two earlier species lived side-by-side about 1.5 million years ago in parts of Kenya for at least half a million years, Leakey and colleagues report in a paper to be published in the journal Nature tomorrow.

    In 2000 Leakey found an old H. erectus complete skull within walking distance of an upper jaw of the H. habilis, and both dated from the same general time period. That makes it unlikely that H. erectus evolved from H. habilis, researchers said.

    It's the equivalent of finding that your grandmother and great-grandmother were sisters rather than mother-daughter, said study co-author Fred Spoor, a professor of evolutionary anatomy at the University College in London.

    The two species lived near each other, but probably didn't interact with each other, each having their own "ecological niche," Spoor said. Homo habilis was likely more vegetarian and Homo erectus ate some meat, he said. Like chimps and apes, "they'd just avoid each other, they don't feel comfortable in each other's company," he said.

    They have some still-undiscovered common ancestor that probably lived 2 million to 3 million years ago, a time that has not left much fossil record, Spoor said.

    Overall what it paints for human evolution is a "chaotic kind of looking evolutionary tree rather than this heroic march that you see with the cartoons of an early ancestor evolving into some intermediate and eventually unto us," Spoor said in a phone interview from a field office of the Koobi Fora Research Project in northern Kenya.

    That old evolutionary cartoon, while popular with the general public, keeps getting proven wrong and too simple, said Bill Kimbel, who praised the latest findings. He is science director of the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University and wasn't involved in the research team.

    "The more we know, the more complex the story gets," he said. Scientists used to think H. sapiens evolved from Neanderthals, he said, but now know that both species lived during the same time period and that we did not come from Neanderthals.

    Now a similar discovery applies further back in time.

    Leakey's team spent seven years analyzing the fossils before announcing their findings that it was time to redraw the family tree – and rethink other ideas about human evolutionary history, especially about our most immediate ancestor, H. erectus.

    Because the H. erectus skull Leakey recovered was much smaller than others, scientists had to first prove that it was erectus and not another species nor a genetic freak. The jaw, probably from an 18- or 19-year-old female, was adult and showed no signs of any type of malformations or genetic mutations, Spoor said. The scientists also know it isn't H. habilis from several distinct features on the jaw.

    That caused researchers to re-examine the 30 other erectus skulls they have and the dozens of partial fossils. They realized that the females of that species are much smaller than the males – something different from modern man, but similar to other animals, said study co-author Susan Anton, a New York University anthropologist. Scientists hadn't looked carefully enough before to see that there was a distinct difference in males and females.

    Difference in size between males and females seem to be related to monogamy, the researchers said. Primate species that have same-sized males and females, such as gibbons, tend to be more monogamous. Species that are not monogamous, such as gorillas and baboons, have much bigger males.

    This suggests that our ancestor H. erectus reproduced with multiple partners.

    The H. habilis jaw was dated at 1.44 million years ago. That is the youngest ever found from a species that scientists originally figured died off somewhere between 1.7 and 2 million years ago, Spoor said. It enabled scientists to say that H. erectus and H. habilis lived at the same time.

    All the changes to human evolutionary thought should not be considered a weakness in the theory of evolution, Kimbel said. Rather, those are the predictable results of getting more evidence, asking smarter questions and forming better theories, he said.

    On the Net:

    Nature: www.nature.com[/B]
                  


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