Sobota 4. září 2010

30,000-Year-Old Child's Teeth Shed New Light on Human Evolution

ScienceDaily,   Pátek 8. leden 2010

ScienceDaily (Jan. 8, 2010) — The teeth of a 30,000-year-old child are shedding new light on the evolution of modern humans, thanks to research from the University of Bristol published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


Virtual 3D reconstruction of four deciduous and one permanent teeth assessed for linear, surface, and volumetric tissue proportions. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of Bristol)

 

The teeth are part of the remarkably complete remains of a child found in the Abrigo do Lagar Velho, Portugal and excavated in 1998-9 under the leadership of Professor João Zilhão of the University of Bristol. Classified as a modern human with Neanderthal ancestry, the child raises controversial questions about how extensively Neanderthals and modern human groups of African descent interbred when they came into contact in Europe.

'Early modern humans', whose anatomy is basically similar to that of the human race today, emerged over 50,000 years ago and it has long been the common perception that little has changed in human biology since then.

When considering the biology of late archaic humans such as the Neanderthals, it is thus common to compare them with living humans and largely ignore the biology of the early modern humans who were close in time to the Neanderthals.

With this in mind, an international team, including Professor Zilhão, reanalysed the dentition of the Lagar Velho child (all of its deciduous -- milk -- teeth and almost all of its permanent teeth) to see how they compared to the teeth of Neanderthals, later Pleistocene (12,000-year-old) humans and modern humans.

Employing a technique called micro-tomography which uses x-rays to create cross-sections of 3D-objects, the researchers investigated the relative stages of formation of the developing teeth and the proportions of crown enamel, dentin and pulp in the teeth.

They found that, for a given stage of development of the cheek teeth, the front teeth were relatively delayed in their degree of formation. Moreover, the front teeth had a greater volume of dentin and pulp but proportionally less enamel than the teeth of recent humans.

The teeth of the Lagar Velho child thus fit the pattern evident in the preceding Neanderthals, and contrast with the teeth of later Pleistocene (12,000-year-old) humans and living modern humans.

Professor Zilhão said: "This new analysis of the Lagar Velho child joins a growing body of information from other early modern human fossils found across Europe (in Mladeč in the Czech Republic, Peştera cu Oase and Peştera Muierii in Romania, and Les Rois in France) that shows these 'early modern humans' were 'modern' without being 'fully modern'. Human anatomical evolution continued after they lived 30,000 to 40,000 years ago."

The team was led by Priscilla Bayle (Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, France) and Roberto Macchiarelli (Université de Poitiers, France) and included Erik Trinkaus (Professor of Anthropology at Washington University, St.-Louis, Cidália Duarte (Câmara Municipal do Porto, Portugal), and Arnaud Mazurier (CRI-Biopôle-Poitiers, France).



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<< K tématu

Pátek 15. prosince 2006

http://www.bible.ca/tracks/tracks-cambodia.htm

Dinosaurs in ancient Cambodian temple
Amazing evidence that dinosaurs and humans coexisted.

 

Pátek 15. prosince 2006

Středa 28. října 2009

Homo Genus Skull Found
In 360 Million
Year Old Quarry
This may be another piece in the cosmic jigsaw puzzle of our true
human origins. Primate Skull, genus Homo found in
marble quarry: 360 million years old
 
From Brad Steiger
[All four photographs are copyright
by Professor Mohammed Zarouit]    
12-2-5
 
In July 2005, a small primate skull was discovered in the desert of Tafilalet near Erfound, Morocco.  It was in the sand of a marble quarry where Devonian fossils were already found.  Subsequently, the skull could be around 360 million years old.  Characteristic features in the only 6.1 cm high and 3.9 cm broad fossil indicate the genus Homo: a globular forehead and hind skull and an inferior position of the occipital hole under the cranium, which is typical for upright body posture.  The fossil was called Homo alaouite, in homage to the Alaouite Dynasty.
'
 
 
 
 

Čtvrtek 29. listopadu 2007

 SVĚDKOVÉ VÁLKY

Svědectvím zřejmě nejstarší známé války na světě jsou hliněné kulky objevené při vykopávkách v syrském Hamoukaru. Tým syrských a amerických archeologů tam našel asi 1200 hliněných kulek, které pocházejí zhruba z doby 3500 let př. n. l. Kromě kulek se našla i keramika různých typů, což svědčí o tom, že obyvatelé z mezopotamského města Uruk obsadili krátce po bitvě Hamoukar. Archeologové předpokládají, že armáda několika set vojáků z Uruku napadla Hamoukar, ale zjistila, že je dobře opevněn. Mnoho kulek je zploštělých, evidentně neměly čas ztvrdnout před použitím. Vědci to pokládají za důkaz, že vojákům z Uruku došla munice, a proto si kulky na místě rychle vyráběli z jílu. Zřejmě šlo o snahu Uruku zlikvidovat politického a ekonomického soupeře, kterým byl Hamoukar.

http://stoplusjedna.newtonit.cz/

Pátek 15. prosince 2006

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