Eropa ngga mau ketinggalan mencari nenek moyangnya.
Siapa yg paling moderen ... ?
Siapa yang paling duluan ... ?

RDP
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September 23, 2003   

Jawbone Hints at Europe's Earliest Modern Humans
 
Scientists have uncovered yet another tiny piece of the puzzle of our origins. 
Findings published online this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of 
Sciences describe a lower jawbone that they say is the earliest evidence of 
anatomically modern humans in Europe. 
Three Romanian spelunkers recovered the mandible in February 2002 at a site in the 
southwestern Carpathian Mountains known as Pestera cu Oase, or the "Cave with Bones." 
The cave also housed other fossils including a facial skeleton, a temporal bone and a 
partial braincase that are currently undergoing examination. Radiocarbon analysis 
dates the jawbone to between 34,000 and 36,000 years ago, report Erik Trinkaus of 
Washington University and his colleagues. "The jawbone is the oldest directly dated 
modern human fossil," Trinkaus remarks. "Taken together, the material is the first 
that securely documents what modern humans looked like when they spread into Europe. 
Although we call them 'modern humans,' they were not fully modern in the sense that we 
think of living people." 
 
 
According to the researchers, the jawbone provides perspective on the emergence of 
anatomically modern humans in the northwestern Old World, which is a far from simple 
story. The two most prominent theories are the Out of Africa model, which states that 
Homo sapiens arose in Africa between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago and went on to 
replace archaic hominids such as the Neandertals, and the multiregional evolution 
model, which holds that modern humans instead emerged from these archaic populations 
across the Old World. The newly characterized jawbone has many features in common with 
remains of other early modern humans found at sites in Africa, the Middle East and 
later European locales, but the large face size inferred from the jaw also hints at 
the retention of some archaic characteristics. Notes Trinkaus, "the specimens suggest 
that there have been clear changes in human anatomy since then." 

In 1999, Trinkaus and his colleagues reported on the discovery of a 25,000-year-old 
skeleton from Portugal said to share a mix of Neandertal and modern characteristics. 
The Pestera cu Oase finds, he adds, "are also fully compatible with the blending of 
modern human and Neandertal populations." --Sarah Graham 

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