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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Puzzling over pre-humans

Posted: Monday, October 06, 2008 9:43 AM by Alan Boyle


Dave Einsel / Getty Images file
A sculptor's rendering, part of an exhibit focusing on the 3.2-million-
year-old hominid called Lucy, shows how she might have looked in life.

The world’s best-known skeleton of a human ancestor - whose name, "Lucy," came from a Beatles song - now lies splayed out in Seattle's Pacific Science Center like ornaments in a glass jewelry case. Or, more aptly, like 3.2-million-year-old pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.

Anthropologists are still working on the puzzles about human origins that have been posed by Lucy and other fossils, including a major find that was made just a couple of miles away from the place where Lucy was found 34 years ago.

The long-running mystery surrounding the "First Family" - a grouping of fossil bones representing up to 17 of Lucy's kin from Ethiopia's Afar region - is just one of the many unresolved plot threads in the scientific story about our long-ago ancestors.

"Lucy's Legacy," an exhibition that began its Seattle run last weekend, recaps the story so far. The traveling exhibit made news last year when it came to the Houston Museum of Natural History, because it represented the first time the Ethiopian government allowed Lucy's skeleton to be displayed abroad. Since then, the cultural controversy has settled down - but scientific controversies continue.

Almost human?
Lucy and the rest of her species (named Australopithecus afarensis, Latin for "southern ape of Afar") were not human, in everyday terms or technical terms. They looked more like apes than humans, and stood only about three and a half feet (1 meter) tall. But the point is that they stood at all: An analysis of Lucy's pelvis and leg bones indicated that she was capable of walking upright, making her the earliest known specimen exhibiting solid evidence for that trait.


© Pacific Science Center
The skeleton of a 3.2-million-year-old hominid
named Lucy is displayed at the "Lucy's Legacy"
exhibit at Seattle's Pacific Science Center.

Other bones revealed a blend of simian and human features. As I stared down at the jewel case, on display at the Pacific Science Center's "Lucy's Legacy" exhibit, I was most struck by Lucy's V-shaped jaw, lined with fossilized teeth. That, more than anything, gave me a sense of how small and strange-featured Lucy must have been.

For Donald Johanson, the Arizona State University paleoanthropologist who was one of Lucy's discoverers, the jaw told much more: The shape of the bone, the alignment of the teeth and even details about the cusps of Lucy's premolars all told him that Australopithecus afarensis was more apelike than humanlike from the neck up.

The implication was that Lucy's upright walking came before the bigger brains of her descendants. Today, the mainstream view is that australopithecines like Lucy first became bipedal - perhaps as part of an adaptation to living on Africa's savannahs instead of ape-friendly forests. That evolutionary development opened the way for more dextrous hands, and then brains more suited for manipulating tools.

Upright walking has thus come to be considered the key dividing line between the evolutionary branch leading to humans (a category of creatures known as hominids) and the other branches leading to today's non-human primates.

Even assuming that's the right story to tell, there are plenty of gaps in the narrative: Does Lucy really represent the single branch leading to humans, as Johanson proposed? Or is the lower part of the human family tree more like a tangle of shoots and roots, with bipedalism and other humanish traits emerging on multiple fronts? Exactly what kinds of evolutionary pressures were at work? How much did hominids have to cope with natural predators and ancient climate change?

These questions are being pursued by researchers spread out across Africa, from Ethiopia down to South Africa and northwest to Chad. Several years ago, the discovery of a 6- to 7-million-year-old skull in Chad sparked a debate over whether upright walking went much farther back in the family tree, and that debate is still not entirely resolved.

3 million-year-old cold case
Some of the biggest questions surround the First Family, the fossils found by Johanson and his colleagues a year after Lucy's discovery. The collection of more than 200 bones came from the same time frame in which Lucy lived, from the same place, and apparently from the same species. Thirteen to 17 individuals are represented, ranging from juveniles to adults.

To anthropologists investigating the First Family's demise, the mystery is, if anything, even juicier than Lucy's saga.

"It's very much like a forensic case, where you've got an unexplained death ... and you're trying to figure out what happened, only this case is 3 million years old," said the Smithsonian Institution's Anna Kay Behrensmeyer, who has been studying the case for years.

Even Johanson has said the First Family is as deserving of fame as Lucy. According to South African reports, he's trying to nail down the evidence for the cause of death by consulting with an expert on prehistoric predators.

In the past, investigators have suggested that the entire troop of hominids might have died in a flash flood, or were done in by a bout of food poisoning. But Behrensmeyer said the current prevailing theory is that they were the victims of a "surplus killing" by blood-crazed predators. "This is documented as a natural phenomenon," she said.

Behrensmeyer noted that the biggest predators of the time were saber-toothed cats. One scenario suggests that the cats massacred a whole troop of hominids, perhaps leaving behind remains to be scavenged by the ancestors of modern-day hyenas.

But anthropologists are still only in the early stages of the investigation. Some still question whether the First Family was actually a familial unit, or instead represented a variety of hominid species whose bones were cached together by scavengers. Additional pieces of evidence could produce dramatic plot twists, just as they do in the TV crime dramas.

"It's important to get the facts straight," Behrensmeyer said. "What's critical about this is, first of all, to determine whether all these specimens were buried together."

The time frame was far too early for the type of intentional burials that early humans and even Neanderthals were capable of performing, she said. Nevertheless, unraveling the case of the First Family will add a new chapter to the story of Lucy and our other long-ago ancestors.

"It does say a lot about how they died, and how they lived," Behrensmeyer said.

More resources
For much more about the Lucy exhibit, check out the "Lucy's Legacy" Web sites for Houston and Seattle, as well as coverage from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. "Becoming Human" and the Institute of Human Origins' Web site delve into paleoarchaeology in general and Johanson's work in particular. You can also check out the Smithsonian's Human Origins Program and the Leakey Foundation. Our own special report on evolution, "Fast Forward," features an interactive graphic on human origins as well as potential human futures.

If you're looking for books about human origins, you can sink your teeth into one or all of these three, which serve as this month's triple selection for the Cosmic Log Used Book Club.

  • "Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind," by Donald Johanson and Maitland Edey.
  • "The First Human: The Race to Discover Our Earliest Ancestors," by Ann Gibbons.
  • "Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of Our Ancestors," by Nicholas Wade.

The CLUB Club highlights books with cosmic themes that you should be able to find at your local library or secondhand-book shop.

Update for 2:15 p.m. ET: A sharp-eyed commenter recalled that Lucy's bones were brought to the Cleveland Museum of Natural History after their discovery. At the time, Johanson was a curator at the museum, and he worked out a deal with the Ethiopian government to bring Lucy to Cleveland for study in 1975. The bones were returned to Ethiopia in 1980, without going on public display. I've revised this item to make allowance for Lucy's scientific sojourn.

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Comments

cheek bones to die for...
lucy is of the ape kind, not a proto-human.
Oh boy!  Countdown to "If we came from monkeys, how come there's still monkeys?" in 3.....2.....1....
I have often wondered just why bi pedalism is so associated with "like humans."  Just a thought. Could there be more likely criteria in the evolutionary chain then bi pedalism?  Maybe emphasis should change. It is possible that there were a dead end ape that walked up right having nothing to do with evolving into hominids along the chain.
And to think there are still people alive today that will try and tell you the entire planet is 6000 years old! This is amazing stuff and countless people dismiss this as nothing more than wishful thinking and psuedo-science. We need to eradicate this ancient way of blind faith thinking and bring the ahrsh reality to the world.
Facinating. The first family members could have been wiped out by a competing troup. This is also a not so uncommon event among modern primates - and even some modern humans.
I would like to hear Palin's take on this story.
The creationist crowd is going to have fun with this one.

I am wondering about the population numbers for such creatures. I get the idea that there just wasn't that many of the "first family". But that makes little sense considering the overwhelming numbers of predators and other factors lending to mortality. It's a wonder they persisted at all leading to...us!

This is not against evolution but rather a different view. The reason the so-called, “missing link” can’t be found is that it does not exist. Extinction is a major part of Darwin’s evolution and from what I have read interested him the most. The remains are dead end paths taken by these animals, we do not have a missing link because we are a success so far, we are distinct and separate there is no link to be missing.
Genetic grim fairy tale similar to the frog becoming a prince.
Artists can sculpt that story too.
How long before the comments appear saying that we didn't evolve?

I must ask if there is one discrepancy in this story.  I took my children to Cleveland about 11 years ago to view Lucy's remains on display at a university there.  Were these just re-creations?  I know I researched and took them to Cleveland specifically for that purpose (on our way to Niagara Falls!).

[ALAN ADDS: You are correct that Lucy's remains were in Cleveland, but not during the time frame you suggest, and all the info I've seen is that they did not go on public display. My guess is that you saw a fantastic reproduction of the skeleton, but perhaps readers from Cleveland will remember that more vividly. Here's a story from The Plain Dealer that addresses the subject:]

http://www.cleveland.com/sundaymag/
plaindealer/index.ssf?/sundaymag/more/fossil02.html

Excellent story.  I have been a fan of Lucy for many years.  I would love to see the exhibit.
Say what you will, and I'm sure some will get nasty about this, but I believe Gods word.  It tells us how the world began, how we came into being, and how it's all going to end (Look around you, the end isn't all that far away) I know there is a God because I've seen Him and felt Him at work in my life for 40 years now, and I stand on His word only, not those of men.  He has been and always will be my best friend, no one can take that from me, no matter how many "discoveries" others come across.  I have no doubts where I came from, no doubts where I am headed, and no doubts that one day every single person on the face of this earth will one day know the TRUTH also.(Hopefully, sooner than later) Now...call me what you want, but I know that I know that I know my Redeemer lives, and Jesus Christ will have the final word. I hope everyone is listening!  Have a great day!
Another resource is THE BIBLE-and yes, I am a "creationist" and proud of it!!!!
i like the artist rendering. pretty crazy he/she did that with just maybe 2/3 of a skeleton. masterful! haha. i also like how the scientist assumes they were murdered in some sort of ancient conspiracy. how the hell would they know that? were they there? they also suggest a FLOOD...but quickly dismiss it. hmmmm. also...please do more research when comparing creation and evolution. there is more to the creation story than most christians and atheists know. feel free to ask questions.
Wow. One fossil for this protohuman.. Funny how when a human is deformed in some way, it's just a genetic mistake, but when a bones from "ONE" primate doesn't fit the mold then it's the missing link for evloution. Give me a break!!..
Has anyone ever seen a species produce anything outside it's species?  No.  
Lucy is not a human ancestor.  Until it can be proved that the human race came from apes, etc.., it should not be stated as a fact.  It has been proven that the DNA from apes, monkeys, etc. cannot be matched to the human DNA.  It is called the missing link.  The missing link does not exist.  
How come people are always searching for a way to confirm what they say is "right"? Are they so full of questions? If they are so certain that what they are saying is the truth, then they wouldn't have to keep on questioning and searching to find out if what they think is true or not. I have an answer to their questions: The Bible!
Where is God in all of this?
There may or may not be a "missing link" out there but, evolution is alive and well.  Consider that "creationist museum" in Kentucky where they would have you believe that "The Flintstones" is a documentary.
We didnt evolve...
The problem with "Lucy" is that the skeleton was not found all together. The bones are a collection found over hundreds of miles placed together and said to be from the same "person".  
If evolution is a "fact", why isn't aren't there animals, birds, etc. in transition? Don't try to tell me that the transition is complete.  Only a dumbell would believe that one!  Evolution is pure bunk.  Maybe YOU came from a monkey, but I didn't!
We need to acknowledge that we are all in the same family of life.  Lucy is our grandma, Koko is our cousin, Willy is our friend in the neighborhood, Dr. Doolittle was our messiah and we all need to love each other.  Stop eating your relatives and start treating them like friends.  Christmas cannot be carnage anymore. Come on people every body get together start to love one another right now!
One book I read a few years ago, was about how early humans, etc probably lived along the coastlines and so learnt to swim before walking. So yet another factor in skeletal and muscular development?
Why haven't the apes of today evolved?  Will they?  I just don't get it...  I can't believe in this theory.  
IT IS UTTERLY FASCINATING WHAT SCIENTIST CAN DO WHEN THEY FIND A FEW OLD BONES. dETERMINED THE APPEARANCE, THE SEX,AGE AND POSSIBLE CAUSE OF DEATH  OF THE DECEASED .
cue the "satan planted the bones to deceive you" nonsense in 5...

"I was told that when i asked about the dinosaurs in bible school many many years ago."
What a beautiful woman she was, G-G-G-G-Great Grandma! I see that I have her smile too!

Course, I see that others have her grimace, eyes, ears, don't see many noses like that these days--most people have those cutisy "button nose".  

Glad that I don't have that fur coat, a naked ape that I am, can you imagine the ticks, lice, and other varmits---but cousin Pan sure does have that fur coat, as my dear Jane has shown.
Lucy's remains were once in Cleveland, as that is where Johanson worked at the time, but they have been back in Ethiopia for (guessing here) 20 years or so.

Also - merely an observation here - a number of these comments are "baiting" for the Bible thumpers ("Countdown to "If we came from monkeys..."; "The creationist crowd is going to have fun with this one..."; "How long before the comments appear saying that we didn't evolve?", etc, etc).
I realize that these sort of stories bring them out of the woodwork to do their rants, but these comments here are no different than the comments they make.  Do not use science as a political wedge like they use religion - it only weakens the validity of truth.
I am a Christian and I know that the earth has been evolving for billions of years. Most Christians also know this and somehow the media makes it seem otherwise. Relax you fundamentalists! You people make the Bible into a fairy tale. It's actually full of symbolism which is a good thing.
Never mind.

Apparently too late.
Cliff, Jane, et. al,
Just because you do not understand evolution does not mean it is false. Humans and animals ARE evolving right now. It is just that large, quick changes are rare. Smaller changes are more common and go unnoticed in the course of an average lifetime.
Why does it bother you all so much to think that you could have a non-human ancestor? Hitting too close to home?
And as far as God goes, who says this is not his method of creating? Evolution and religion are not mutually exclusive.
Actually, Carbon dating is highly in-accurate after so many thousands of years.  Too many variables are assumed to be constants by "scientists" with a biased philosophy coupled with a biased bank account trying to squeeze as much as they can from government grants by loading congress and society up with so many assumptions.

Gone are the days of pure science where the Scientific Method was followed with extreme prejudice.  Now we can can just make computer models based off a gazillion assumptions instead.
So, who cut her hair?
I agree with a few of the others on here...if we evolved from primates, why arent we (or other animals who also "evolved") in a present state of evoluation. And how come when they show the "evolution" from water to land animals to cavemen, they stop right there? What happened after that?? And yes, WHERE DOES GOD FIT IN IN ALL OF THIS? This is sorta kinda like blasphemy. And how can they just "re-create" a 3D form from a bunch of bones that may not even be from the same being? lol these guys are really funny.
I'm Christian, and I know that the earth is evolving. I don't believe we came from apes or anything other than human. There is no denying that the earth has been here for billions of years. Dinosaurs were here. How could we say otherwise. Even for fundamentalist there are voids in time in the Bible that can't be accounted for. (How long were Adam and Eve in the garden before they sinned?) The problem is that evolution is a theory, not a law. It can't be proven. It has gaps and holes, and I even think it breaks a scientific law or two.
Species evolve over thousands of generations.  Nobody ever said two monkeys mated, and a human was born.  I believe in God just as many of you do, but evolution is not something I "believe" in unless I "believe" that 2+2=4, or that antibiotics cure bacterial infections.  I mean, I have never seen a bacteria die, but I know it happens.  There is not one branch of science that agrees that life does not evolve.  Even our cells evolved from prokaryotes.  The mitochondria in each and every cell making up every human being has its very own extranuclear DNA of fractional size compared to the human genome.    
Evolution = Fact
Creationism = Opinion
End of Story
If you find a tire 10,000 years from now, would you say it was from a Ford Expedition?  Our fossil record is so ridiculously small in comparison to the makings of our planet, how can we possibly even begin to come to so many conclusions about how it all happened? Humans, boy aren't we smart...
Cliff and Jane, obviously, you don't understand evolution, hence your unwillingness to accept it.  Firstly, with regard to Jane's point, the apes of today HAVE evolved.  We don't have 3 million year old gorilla fossils, because gorillas, as we know them now, didn't exist back then (just as people, as we know them now, didn't exist back then).  Here's where anti-evolutionists go wrong: We did NOT evolve FROM a gorilla or orangutan, anymore than a limb high on a tree "evolved from" a limb lower on the tree.  The lower limb has been growing/evolving all this time, just as the higher limb has grown/evolved since it branched forth.  Gorillas may be your 2nd cousin twice removed, but they're not your granddad.

As to Cliff's point, what can one say?  Does he expect to see fossil of a half-fish/half-frog, captured in the act of transforming?  Or does he want to pick up a present day frog and watch it until it turns into a bird?  Because if that is how he believes evolution works, then he's so wrong that one cannot even argue the point.  However, he can go to any farm or any pet shop and get a notion of how evolution works by simply viewing the domesticated versions and variants of what were once wild pigs and aurochs and wolves (in domestication, it is man which provides the primary evolutionary pressure, unlike nature where "survival of the fittest" decides the direction of development).  You don't bring a wolf cub home in the expectation that it will turn into a Llahsa Apso, but you can selectively breed wolves into Llahsa Apsos with enough generations, which is what mankind has done in a few thousand years.  Nature, meanwhile, has had millions and millions of years to work her wonders, a generation at a time.  If Cliff could figure out how to live for, oh, a million years or so, he probably COULD watch the transition.    
If all creatures are still evolving then there could
possibly be a creature that evolves beyond Lucy and her descendants,thatis beyond humankind.If Man was made in image of God.Then he never evolved as Jesus was in the beginning with God and the human like angels.
Lucy is just another animal of a species that lived once upon a time and became extinct. It doesn't mean it was a link to the formation of humans! Here is a link to how humans were formed...the B-I-B-L-E. For those of you out there slapping your foreheads and calling me ignorant I just want you to know....my kids are studying their bibles, and their kids will study their bibles, and so on. Makes you crazy mad, doesn't it?!? You can't erase the Word of God! It will prevail!
To believe in a fairy tale and take the bible as fact is ignorant.
It is full of contradictions and clearly not written by the hand of "god".

"God is a product of human weakness"
Albert Einstein
I don't doubt that God created Humans, and all life for that matter. I do however disagree with mans interpretation of that creation. The bible is a great reference, but it's been edited over the last few thousand years to suit the leaders of the church.
The people who are referencing an incomplete match in DNA between humans and apes are failing to mention that while our DNA isn't identical, it is a 97 percent match.

Apes are not our ancestors, but we are related. We both evolved from the same ancestor, but we've been unable to confirm who that is. This is "the missing link" you hear about.
One species that "became" another (or darn close to the scenario) - Canis lupus begetting Canis familiaris.  And Canis familiaris becoming everything from Chihuahuas to Irish wolfhounds.  Fairly recently, too.  Amazing what a few thousand or even hundred years can make!  Anti-evolutionists, the answer is right under your noses.
"a mix of human and simian traits" Thats what they said about the Piltdowm Man...which turned out to be a ape jaw stuck on human head...a hoax. However they still talked about various simian features of the human head and the human features of the ape jaw....what does that tell you about seeing what you want to see...another interesting thing..some chimpanzees today are quite capable of walking upright,and yet no one is claiming they are part human or on their way to becoming human...


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