The last probable common ancestor
to humans and great apes had a body like an ape, fingers like a chimp and the
upright posture of humans, according to researchers who unearthed a fossil of
the animal in Spain.
A husband-and-wife team of fossil sleuths reopened an
excavation site near Barcelona, discovering a 13 million-year-old animal that
bridges the gap between earlier, primitive animals and later, modern
creatures.
This newest ape species, Pierolapithecus
catalaunicus, is so significant that it adds a new page to ancient human
history.
The researchers sidestepped a controversy raging
through the field by not claiming their find moves great ape evolution -- and the
emergence of humans -- from Africa to Europe. Salvador Moya-Sola said the new ape
species likely lived in both places.
"The problem is the fossil record," Moya-Sola said.
"The fossil record in Africa, especially in the upper Miocene, is very scarce.
And the fossils are very rare. But this is only a question of work, and work,
and work."
Coaxed by a reporter to say Pierolapithecus
catalaunicus represented a "missing link," co-author Meike Kohler demurred.
"I don't like, very much, to use this word because it is a very old
concept."
Kohler added: "This does not mean that just this
individual -- or even this species, exactly this species -- must have been the
species that gave rise to everything else which came later in the great ape
tree. But it is, if not the species, most probably a very closely related
species that gave rise to it."
Maybe. Maybe not, argues David Strait, an assistant
professor anthropology at University at Albany who studies early humans. He said
the team's approach to assigning evolutionary relationships was a bit informal
and needs confirmation by more rigorous methods.
"Ancestor is a loaded term. It's very hard to
identify ancestors in the fossil record," Strait cautioned.
The site that yielded the Spanish specimen had only
one hominid, or ape-like primate. Moya-Sola said fossil apes, however, were
common in the area millions of years ago. The team has already found a tooth
elsewhere and expects to find more hominid fossils.
Still scientists who puzzle through the mysteries of
early human history were electrified by the Pierolapithecus catalaunicus
discovery, to be published in Friday's issue of Science magazine.
"This is a remarkable find," said F. Clark Howell, a
University of California at Berkeley professor emeritus. "It indicates a
diversity in hominids ... in western Eurasia at a time where we're beginning to
think we had a good handle on how much diversity there was."
Howell helps run a National Science Foundation
initiative that examines hominid origins.
Living great apes include humans, chimps, gorillas
and orangutans. The group is thought to have split from the lesser apes, such as
gibbons and siamangs, about 14 million to 16 million years ago.
Paleontologists have searched for remains of great
ape ancestors after that key split. Fossils have been scarce and hypotheses
floated on the basis of bone fragments.
The team led by Moya-Sola and Kohler pieced together
83 bones and identifiable fragments of bones from an adult male ape.
But this ape didn't swing through trees with the
curved fingers of an orangutan. Nor did it knuckle walk on four limbs with the
horizontal trunk posture of a chimp.
"It's a different type of animal," Moya-Sola
said.
The ape's body design suggests it was an adept and
agile climber that kept its trunk upright. To do that, its chest had to be
shaped just so. And the shoulder blades needed to hold to a certain position on
the back.
"Our fossil shows this," he said.
What it does not show is the evolution of hands
suited to the demands of such locomotion as swinging through tree branches. That
fine-tuning of great ape hands, the team argues, came
later.