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Neanderthals were separate species, says new human family tree

A wax figure representing a Neanderthal man on display at a museum. A new simplified family tree of humanity has dealt a blow to those who contend that the enigmatic hominids known as Neanderthals intermingled with our forebears.
A wax figure representing a Neanderthal man on display at a museum. A new, simplified family tree of humanity has dealt a blow to those who contend that the enigmatic hominids known as Neanderthals intermingled with our forebears.

A new, simplified family tree of humanity, published on Sunday, has dealt a blow to those who contend that the enigmatic hominids known as Neanderthals intermingled with our forebears.
Neanderthals were a separate species to Homo sapiens, as anatomically modern humans are known, rather than offshoots of the same species, the new organigram published by the journal Nature declares.

The method, invented by evolutionary analysts in Argentina, marks a break with the conventional technique by which anthropologists chart the twists and turns of the human odyssey.

That technique typically divides the the genus Homo into various classifications according to the shape of key facial features -- "flat-faced," "protruding-faced" and so on.

Reconciling these diverse classifications from a tiny number of specimens spanning millions of years has led to lots of claims and counter-claims, as well as much confusion in the general public, about how we came to be here.

Various species of Homo have been put up for the crown of being our direct ancestor, only to find themselves dimissed by critics as failed branches of the Homo tree.

The authors of the new study, led by Rolando Gonzalez-Jose at the Patagonian National Centre at Puerto Madryn, Argentina, say the problem with the conventional method is that, under evolution, facial traits do not appear out of the blue but result from continuous change.

So the arrival of a specimen that has some relatively minor change of feature as compared to others should not be automatically held up as representing a new species, they argue.

The team goes back over the same well-known set of specimens, but uses a different approach to analyse it, focussing in particular on a set of fundamental yet long-term changes in skull shape.

They took digital 3D images of the casts of 17 hominid specimens as well as from a gorilla, chimpanzee and H. sapiens.

The images were then crunched through a computer model to compare four fundamental variables -- the skull's roundness and base, the protrusion of the jaw, and facial retraction, which is the position of the face relative to the cranial base.

When other phylotogenic techniques are used, the outcome is a family tree whose main lines closely mirror existing ones but offers a clearer view as to how the evolutionary path unfolded.

The paper suggests that, after evolving from the hominid Australopithecus afarensis, the first member of Homo, H. habilis, arose between 1.5 and 2.1 million years ago.

We are direct linear descendants of H. habilis. H. sapiens started to show up around 200,000 years ago.

None of the species currently assigned to Homo are discarded, though.

On the other hand, the Neanderthals are declared "chronological variants inside a single biological heritage," in other words, evolutionary cousins but still a separate species from us.

The squat, low-browed Neanderthals lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East for around 170,000 but traces of them disappear some 28,000 years ago, their last known refuge being Gibraltar.

Why they died out is a matter of furious debate, because they co-existed alongside anatomically modern man.

Some opinions aver that the Neanderthals were slowly wiped out by the smarter H. sapiens in the competition for resources.

Other contend that we and the Neanderthals were more than just kissing cousins. Interbreeding took place, which explains why the Neanderthal line died out, but implies that we could have Neanderthal inheritage in our genome today, goes this theory.

© 2008 AFP
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Posted by tkjtkj 05/05/08 06:14
Rank: 1.86/5 after 7 votes
Where I come from, a 'species' is
a group that does not interbreed
with other, dissimilar groups. To
imagine that Neanderthal is a
separate species is fallacious.
Posted by Doug_Huffman 05/05/08 06:29
Rank: 2/5 after 1 vote
The demos and their media is not the place to seek news and especially developments in evolution theory. They don't know what the words mean.
Posted by Soylent 05/05/08 09:47
Not rated yet.
Where I come from, a 'species' is
a group that does not interbreed
with other, dissimilar groups.


The article agrees. It is suggesting that neanderthals did not interbreed with homo sapiens.
Posted by zevkirsh 05/05/08 11:52
Rank: 2.5/5 after 4 votes
at the margins, there is no such thing as 'separate' species. at the margins of separate species, the real question is what are the ratios of the infant mortality rate for purebread infants of the two interbreeding 'species' vs. the infanct mortality rate for hybrid species infants. example : x species , y species,
where xx is pure, yy is pure, and xy is the hybrid infant. if the mortality rate is 75%, 70%, and 30% respectivley, than you aren't going to see many of the hybrids. furthermore if the the hybrid infant is sterile a significant portion of the time, you can simply assume that you will see almost no hybrid species successfully develop as a group. As long as hybrids are over a threshhold of virility, it is the relative disparity in infant mortality rates (controlling for all non-species related influences) that serve as the best guide for if two groups constitute truly separte groups, or if they do not. if the mortality rate is alot lower for the hybrid than of either of the 2 purepbreeds, by virtue of the hybrid genetics, than the groups are separate
Posted by deepsand 05/05/08 20:44
Rank: 4.67/5 after 3 votes
Where I come from, a 'species' is
a group that does not interbreed
with other, dissimilar groups. To
imagine that Neanderthal is a
separate species is fallacious.


Actually, cross-species breeding is common, yielding offspring that are, for those species which employ sexual reproduction, almost always sterile.

Examples:

1) Mule - male donkey & female horse.
2) Hinny - female donkey & male horse.
Posted by EarthScientist 05/06/08 23:30
Rank: 1/5 after 3 votes
ose cave men genetics are from system 12 ,and they are still there and there are dinosaurs there also,our were killed off ,as you know,and it was about 28 thou ago. Someday ,maybe good little boys and girls will get a lifter ride for an expedition there.
Posted by DeeSmith 05/08/08 23:06
Not rated yet.
Svante Paabo and his boyz at the Max Planck Institute should be finishing up their sequencing of the Neanderthal genome shortly. Divergence from the human/primate species lineage was thought to occur about a half million years ago (recent papers on a very old proto-human fossil of purported age of ~400K years). Paabo published a string of papers in 2006, based on a million bp early analysis of the Neanderthal genome that it was a separate species from humans. This report, using assigned phenotypic species characters, is one of many methods for assigning phylogeny ranking among related species.

IF you want to know why they died out, look up "Heinrich Events". Very early humans nearly bit the bullet during one such event.
Posted by fredrick 05/08/08 23:55
Not rated yet.
To
imagine that Neanderthal is a
separate species is fallacious.


(a) you don't need to break the line yourself, todays amazing modern software can do it all by itself.

(b) why is it fallacious to imagine Neanderthals were a seperate species? This is an incredibly fallacious thing to say. You seem to be saying that same species = interbreedability (something which has already been pointed out as strictly incorrect), so, unless I'm mistaken, you are arguing that because neanderthals and early humans interbred they are therefore the same species... but where are you getting the evidence that they actually DID interbreed (and produced fertile offspring)?
Posted by DeeSmith 05/09/08 00:27
Not rated yet.
Serre, D., Langaney, A., Chech, M., Teschler-Nicola, M., Paunovic, M., Mennecier, P., Hofreiter, M., Possnert, G, and Pääbo, S.: No evidence of Neandertal mtDNA contribution to early modern humans. PLoS Biology 2: 313-317 (2004).

The retrieval of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences from four Neandertal fossils from Germany, Russia, and Croatia has demonstrated that these individuals carried closely related mtDNAs that are not found among current humans. However, these results do not definitively resolve the question of a possible Neandertal contribution to the gene pool of modern humans since such a contribution might have been erased by genetic drift or by the continuous influx of modern human DNA into the Neandertal gene pool. A further concern is that if some Neandertals carried mtDNA sequences similar to contemporaneous humans, such sequences may be erroneously regarded as modern contaminations when retrieved from fossils. Here we address these issues by the analysis of 24 Neandertal and 40 early modern human remains. The biomolecular preservation of four Neandertals and of five early modern humans was good enough to suggest the preservation of DNA. All four Neandertals yielded mtDNA sequences similar to those previously determined from Neandertal individuals, whereas none of the five early modern humans contained such mtDNA sequences. In combination with current mtDNA data, this excludes any large genetic contribution by Neandertals to early modern humans, but does not rule out the possibility of a smaller contribution.

See also:

How did modern humans displace Neanderthals?
Insights from hunter-gatherer ethnography and archaeology Edited by N. Conard, Kerns Verlag Publishers, Tübingen (2006).
www.anthro.utah.e...ll05.pdf