Thursday, June 18, 2009
New evidence underscores the theory of
human origin that suggests humans most likely share a common ancestor with
orangutans, according to research from the University of Pittsburgh and the
Buffalo Museum of Science. Reporting in the June 18 edition of the Journal of
Biogeography, the researchers reject as "problematic" the popular suggestion,
based on DNA analysis, that humans are most closely related to chimpanzees,
which they maintain is not supported by fossil evidence.
Jeffrey H.
Schwartz, professor of anthropology in Pitt's School of Arts and Sciences and
president of the World Academy of Art and Science, and John Grehan, director of
science at the Buffalo Museum, conducted a detailed analysis of the physical
features of living and fossil apes that suggested humans, orangutans, and early
apes belong to a group separate from chimpanzees and gorillas. They then
constructed a scenario for how the human-orangutan common ancestor migrated
between Southeast Asia—where modern orangutans are from—and other parts of the
world and evolved into now-extinct apes and early humans. The study provides
further evidence of the human-orangutan connection that Schwartz first proposed
in his book The Red Ape: Orangutans and Human Origins, Revised and Updated
(Westview Press, 2005).
Schwartz and Grehan scrutinized the hundreds of
physical characteristics often cited as evidence of evolutionary relationships
among humans and other great apes—chimps, gorillas, and orangutans—and selected
63 that could be verified as unique within this group (i.e., they do not appear
in other primates). Of these features, the analysis found that humans shared 28
unique physical characteristics with orangutans, compared to only two features
with chimpanzees, seven with gorillas, and seven with all three apes
(chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans). Gorillas and chimpanzees shared 11
unique characteristics.
Schwartz and Grehan then examined 56 features
uniquely shared among modern humans, fossil hominids—ancestral humans such as
Australopithecus—and fossil apes. They found that orangutans shared eight
features with early humans and Australopithecus and seven with Australopithecus
alone. The occurrence of orangutan features in Australopithecus contradicts the
expectation generated by DNA analysis that ancestral humans should have
chimpanzee similarities, Schwartz and Grehan write. Chimpanzees and gorillas
were found to share only those features found in all great apes.
Schwartz and Grehan pooled humans, orangutans, and the fossil apes into
a new group called "dental hominoids," named for their similarly thick-enameled
teeth. They labeled chimpanzees and gorillas as African apes and wrote in
Biogeography that although they are a sister group of dental hominoids, "the
African apes are not only less closely related to humans than are orangutans,
but also less closely related to humans than are many" fossil apes.
The
researchers acknowledge, however, that early human and ape fossils are largely
found in Africa, whereas modern orangutans are found in Southeast Asia. To
account for the separation, they propose that the last common human-orangutan
ancestor migrated between Africa, Europe, and Asia at some point that ended at
least 12 million to 13 million years ago. Plant fossils suggest that forests
once extended from southern Europe, through Central Asia, and into China prior
to the formation of the Himalayas, Schwartz and Grehan write, proposing that the
ancestral dental hominoid lived and roamed throughout this vast area; as the
Earth's surface and local ecosystems changed, descendant dental hominoids became
geographically isolated from one another.
Schwartz and Grehan compare
this theory of ancestral distribution with one designed to accommodate a
presumed human-chimpanzee relationship. They write that in the absence of
African ape fossils more than 500,000 years old, a series of "complicated and
convoluted" scenarios were invented to suggest that African apes had descended
from earlier apes that migrated from Africa to Europe. According to these
scenarios, European apes then diverged into apes that moved on to Asia and into
apes that returned to Africa to later become humans and modern apes. Schwartz
and Grehan challenge these theories as incompatible with the morphological and
biogeographic evidence.
Paleoanthropologist Peter Andrews, a past head
of Human Origins at the London Natural History Museum and coauthor of The
Complete World of Human Evolution (Thames & Hudson, 2005), said that
Schwartz and Grehan provide good evidence to support their theory. Andrews had
no part in the research, but is familiar with it.
"They have good
morphological evidence in support of their interpretation, so that it must be
taken seriously, and if it reopens the debate between molecular biologists and
morphologists, so much the better," Andrews said. "They are going against
accepted interpretations of human and ape relationships, and there's no doubt
their conclusions will be challenged. But I hope it will be done in a
constructive way, for science progresses by asking questions and testing
results."
Schwartz and Grehan contend in the Journal of Biogeography
that the clear physical similarities between humans and orangutans have long
been overshadowed by molecular analyses that link humans to chimpanzees, but
that those molecular comparisons are often flawed: There is no theory holding
that molecular similarity necessarily implies an evolutionary relationship;
molecular studies often exclude orangutans and focus on a limited selection of
primates without an adequate "outgroup" for comparison; and molecular data that
contradict the idea that genetic similarity denotes relation are often
dismissed.
"They criticize molecular data where criticism is due," said
Malte Ebach, a researcher at Arizona State University's International Institute
for Species Exploration who also was not involved in the project but is familiar
with it.
"Palaeoanthropology is based solely on morphology, and there is
no scientific justification to favor DNA over morphological data. Yet the
human-chimp relationship, generated by molecular data, has been accepted without
any scrutiny. Grehan and Schwartz are not just suggesting an orangutan–human
relationship—they're reaffirming an established scientific practice of
questioning data."
###
University of Pittsburgh
Thanks for sharing! Good article.
good but long article, i looked closely at the orangutans pics, superficially their facial features look more like human
then how come the orangutans does not evolve into humans as well
too many factors to be accounted. wat we are now today may have come from one branch related to the orangutans, not directly from the orangutans
How come evolution suddenly stopped ?
U know how long it takes just for an eyeball to 'evolve' ? I hardly doubt evolution theories.
Understanding humans are giving us enough of a headache...
Originally posted by BadzMaro:How come evolution suddenly stopped ?
U know how long it takes just for an eyeball to 'evolve' ? I hardly doubt evolution theories.