Just fyi....

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<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
mungkin sudah pada tahu berita ini. kemarin saya lihat di CNN berita
ini:.......

Scientists hail discovery of 160,000-year-old remains in Ethiopian
desert
as
breakthrough in search for answers to evolution puzzle
By Steve Connor, Science Editor
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_medical/story.jsp?
story=414672
12 June 2003

Few things can grow in the dry, sandy soil of Ethiopia's Middle Awash
region. For Tim White, however, the land has - once again - produced
a rich
crop of
discoveries that can further explain the complicated origins of
humankind.

Professor White, one of the world's most prominent anthropologists,
yesterday unveiled the fruits of his latest research - three well-
preserved skulls
belonging to the earliest members of our own species, Homo sapiens.

The three individuals, two adults and one child, lived about 160,000
years
ago, making their skulls about 60,000 years older than the previous
oldest
fossils of anatomically "modern" humans.
Professor White, who is based at the University of California,
Berkeley,
said that the three very probably belonged to the group of ancient
humans
from
which everyone alive today is descended.
"With these new crania [skulls] we can now see what our direct
ancestors
looked like," said Professor White, whose study is published in the
journal
Nature.

The date of the fossils is important because it matches precisely
the age
at
which Homo sapiens is said to have diverged from its ancestral line
as
calculated from the genetic analysis of human DNA.
"We've lacked intermediate fossils between pre-humans and modern
humans,
between 100,000 and 300,000 years ago, and that's where these
fossils fit,"
Professor White said. "Now, the fossil record meshes with the
molecular
evidence."

For decades, Professor White and his team of scientists have scoured
the
Middle Awash in search of fossils and stone artefacts that could
shed light
on
the evolution of early man.
Their strategy is to walk the fossil-rich sites at regular intervals,
examining every stone and pebble in case a fragment of bone, tooth
or stone
tool has
emerged from the ground as the soil erodes. One day in November
1997, the
scientists were on such a survey of a dry, desolate valley bordering
the
Middle
Awash river near the village of Herto when Professor White spotted
some
stone
tools and the fossilised skull of a butchered hippopotamus.

Eleven days later he returned with a team to excavate the site more
thoroughly. Out of the same patch of land, now further exposed by
heavy
rains, emerged
the most complete of the adult skulls. All three fossils were
sandwiched
between two volcanic layers that could be accurately dated to about
160,000BC. The
age of the bones and their remarkable state of preservation made the
discovery unprecedented.

"It's a great find," said Professor Chris Stringer, head of human
origins
at
the Natural History Museum in London.

"These could be the earliest ancestors of all of us. They are in the
right
time and the right place and it is powerful evidence that Homo
sapiens
originated in Africa."

Clark Howell, a team member, said: "This set of fossils is
stupendous.
This
is truly a revolutionary scientific discovery."

A key anatomical feature of the skulls was their similarity to
skulls of
modern humans and the distinct separation from other species of
hominids,
such as
Neanderthal man, Dr Howell said. "These well-dated and anatomically
diagnostic Herto fossils are unmistakably non-Neanderthal. These
fossils
show that
near-humans had evolved in Africa long before the European
Neanderthals
disappeared," Dr Howell said.

"They thereby demonstrate conclusively there was never a Neanderthal
stage
in human evolution," he added.
For decades, anthropologists have argued over whether Neanderthals
were a
direct ancestor of modern humans or whether they were a distant
cousin
whose
lineage died out more than 30,000 years ago.

Berhane Asfaw of the Rift Valley Research Service in Addis Ababa,
who is
another member of Professor White's team, said the three Herto skulls
finally
answer the question. "These fossilised skulls from Herto show modern
humans
were
living at around 160,000 years ago with full-fledged Homo sapiens
features.
The hypothesis is now tested [and] we can conclusively say
Neanderthals had
nothing to do with modern humans. They went extinct."

Although the three skulls show unequivocal similarities with the
skulls of
anatomically modern humans they also possess traits at the back of
the
skull
they share with "Rhodesia man", found in what is now Zimbabwe, who
lived
about
500,000 years ago.

Because of that, researchers placed the fossils in a separate
subspecies
category called Homo sapiens idaltu - the word "idaltu" in the Afar
language
means "elder". The skull of the child suggests it died at the age of
six or
seven
and delicate cut marks on the bone suggest it was subjected to
mortuary
rituals, such as defleshing, and the presence of apparently polished
surfaces on the
skull indicates it was handled repeatedly after death.

Professor White said the Herto people probably engaged in funeral
rituals,
perhaps the preservation and worship of the skulls of close
relatives.

No other human bones were found at the site, suggesting the skulls
were
carried and "moved around", Professor White said. "They probably cut
muscles and
broke skull bases of some to extract the brain but why, whether as
part of
a
cannibalistic ritual, we have no way of knowing.
"These were people using a sophisticated stone technology, using
chipped
hand axes and other stone tools," Professor White added.




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