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Based on their unprecedented personal examination of virtually every known hominid fossil in collections around the world, Ian Tattersall and Jeffrey Schwartz offer a radical reinterpretation of human evolution. They demonstrate that there have been multiple coexisting human species throughout hominid history, even as recently as 25,000 years ago.
The human family tree has long been invisioned as a straight line progression from bipedal apes to Homo habilis to Homo erectus to Neanderthal to us, Homo sapiens. But this model of a single species at a time is suspiciously unlike the pattern of multiple branchings and extinctions known for other groups of organisms, and it fails to confront adequately the variation evident in the hominid fossil record itself. Eschewing preconceived models of evolution, Tattersall and Schwartz look anew to the morphology of the fossils to see what story they tell. It is a story of great variation, and repeated speciation and extinction, played out over millions of years of hominid history.
One of the recurrent themes of the boook is that related hominid species undoubtedly lived together over time and space, possibly peaceably, but possibly in direct or indirect competition with one another. Since the mid-twentieth century, for example, it has been evident that two species of australopithecines existed at one time in South Africa, one of which, a specialized vegetarian, went extinct without descendants. Early members of our genus, Homo, existed side by side with australopithecines, complicating the picture further. Recent redating of Asian Homo erectus fossils implies that Java man might have been a contemporary of European Neanderthals and even modern humans, casting serious doubt on the longstanding belief that this widespread hominid was our direct ancestor. It is increasingly clear that the Neanderthals were not directly ancestral to modern humans but were in fact a side branch whose extinction was due in large part to competition - whether violent or not - ! with modern humans who invaded Europe 40,000 years ago.
Extinct Humans presents convincing evidence that over 15 different species of human have existed over time, with multiple human species coexisting simultaneously up until only 25,000 years sgo. How did our fellow humans differ from us? Which were direct ancestors to us and which represent ultimate dead branches on our family tree? Perhaps most provocatively, Why are we the lone remaining species?
Extinct Humans contains over 150 illustrations, most of them in full color. Many of the photos were taken by the authors themselves as part of their extensive reexamination of hominid fossils around the world.
Stone tools and fossilized jawbones meet complex, reticulated theories from the history of anthropology and evolution in this attractively produced introduction to the vexed world of early hominids. Tattersall and Schwartz (who took many of the book's b&w photos) describe their popularly intended work as the by-product of a continuing paleontological goal: the authors want to describe "the huge variety of human fossils according to a single consistent protocol." The first chapter covers the history of speculation about human origins, from Aristotle's to Goethe's concepts to discovery of the 1856 Feldhofer Grotto Neanderthal fossil, to today's debates about the branching trees of Homo and Australopithecus. Then we're off to the fossils themselves and to the vigorous debates about themAdebates until recently carried on with too little data and too little reference to norms of nonanthropoid paleontology. Was Robert Broom's Kromdraai hominid (1938) a new genus of proto-humans, Paranthropus? His reasons for saying so wouldn't have held water had he been classifying, say, sea urchins. Skull contours, pelvis shapes, tooth types, climate change and fossil footprints enter into the debates Tattersall (The Fossil Trail; The Last Neanderthal) and Schwartz (Skeleton Keys; Sudden Origins) record. Previous paleoanthropologists, the authors explain, tried too hard to imagine a single line culminating in Homo sapiens. Hominid history ought to look less like a queue than like a treeAlater chapters explore that tree and its fruits. The authors clearly describe recent discoveries in China; map hypothesized early-human migrations; cover the decline of the Neanderthals; and consider Western Europe's trove of cave paintings and bone flutesAevidence of practices that characterize, not Neanderthals, but just us. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Tattersall (curator of anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History) and Schwartz (professor of physical anthropology at the University of Pittsburgh) have traveled around the globe to examine essentially every known hominid fossil. Their study of the anatomy has led them to the following conclusion. The pattern of evolution in our own species is no different from that of the rest of the earth's fauna: "repeated evolutionary experimentation, diversification and, ultimately, extinction." This reasoning may seem only commonsensical to those unfamiliar with the more usual picture that paleoanthropologists sketch of a rather linear development--"a single-minded struggle," as the authors put it, "from bestial benightedness to uplifted enlightenment." They develop their theme with great style (and great photographs) and conclude by suggesting what accounts for H. sapiens' being the lone hominid on the earth today. We won't spoil the fascinating read by divulging what they (very convincingly) propose. The book is an intellectual adventure that would be well worth undertaking for this intriguing denouement alone, but there are in addition a wealth of informative stops en route.
EDITORS OF SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
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