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To: RoughDobermann
A million-year-old skull found in Ethiopia confirms the theory

That entire phrase is so un-scientific it's pathetic. Never does one single piece of evidence confirm an entire theory.
2 posted on 03/21/2002 7:07:31 AM PST by jurisdog
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To: jurisdog
Other anthropologists called the Ethiopian skull an important find but said it does not resolve the debate. "This whole species question is all about what you accept as a sharp enough distinction to tell you that it is a separate species," said Susan Anton, a Rutgers University anthropologist. "This particular skull is not going to solve that problem."

This seems more reasonable...

4 posted on 03/21/2002 7:16:37 AM PST by RoughDobermann
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To: jurisdog
This was an article written for CNN not Science. 'nuff said.
10 posted on 03/21/2002 7:57:23 AM PST by The Shootist
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To: jurisdog
Well, the theory predicted that a critter with certain characteristics lived in Ethiopia a million years ago, and researchers discovered the skull of a critter with those characteristics living in Ethiopia a million years ago -- if that isn't confirmation, I need a new dictionary.
15 posted on 03/21/2002 8:32:22 AM PST by Junior
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To: jurisdog
This might help you out if you're seeking something a slight bit more scientific from Scientific American:

skull
Image: Courtesy of Nature

Scholars of human evolution have long debated just how many branches and twigs make up the human family tree. Some place the known human fossils into numerous genera and species, creating a bushy tree. Others tend to see more similarities between fossils and opt for trees with fewer offshoots. Now newly described fossils from Ethiopia indicate that for at least one part of the human pedigree, less is more.

Announcing their findings today in the journal Nature, a team of researchers led by Ethiopian paleoanthropologist Berhane Asfaw reports that the million-year-old fossils, which belong to Homo erectus, lay to rest the idea that that species should be split in two. Some experts have argued that earlier African representatives of the group, which dates back as far as 1.7 million years ago, look so different from later examples from Asia that they warrant their own species, H. ergaster. In this scenario, Asian Homo erectus went extinct and H. ergaster spawned modern humans. But the newly recovered remains--including a complete skull cap (see image)--exhibit an intermediate anatomy that, according to Asfaw's group, bridges the gap between the two proposed species.

"Before this time, we really haven't had a good comparison between African and Asian forms from the same time window," says team member W. Henry Gilbert, a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley. "We've had early African forms and late Asian forms, and people have used the differences between them to generalize about all African and Asian specimens. Now that we have a later African form for comparison, we are finding that they are very similar in a lot of the features that people were formerly using to separate early African from late Asian ones."

"The anthropological splitting common today is giving the wrong impression about the biology of these early human ancestors," asserts Berkeley paleoanthropologist Tim White, another study co-author. "The different names indicate an apparent diversity that is not real." Homo erectus, he says, was a biologically successful organism, "not a whole series of different human ancestors, all but one of which went extinct." --Kate Wong

33 posted on 03/21/2002 10:18:45 AM PST by JediGirl
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