
Geologist
Frank Brown, dean of mines and Earth sciences at the University
of Utah, crouches on Ethiopia's Kibish rock formation, where Brown
and colleagues determined that fossilized bones of Homo sapiens
were 195,000 years old—the oldest fossils of our species
ever found.
Photo by Ian McDougall, Australian National University

The
bones of an early member of our species, Homo sapiens, known as
Omo I, excavated from Ethiopia's Kibish rock formation. The bones
are kept in the National Museum of Ethiopia. When the first bones
from Omo I were found in 1967, they were thought to be 130,000
years old. Later, 160,000-year-old bones of our species were found
elsewhere. Now, a new study by scientists from the University
of Utah and elsewhere determined that Omo I lived about 195,000
years ago—the oldest known bones of the human species.
Photo
by John Fleagle, Stony Brook University

Ethiopia's
Omo River flows below bluffs of the Kibish rock formation, where
scientists first excavated the bones of early humans in 1967 and
estimated they were 130,000 years old. But in a new study in the
journal Nature, scientists from Utah, New York state and Australia
determined those bones and newly excavated fossils actually were
from members of our species who roamed the area 195,000 years
ago. They are the oldest known fossils of Homo sapiens.
Photo
by Frank Brown, University of Utah

Two
pieces of a femur—the leg bone immediately above the knee—from
an early human known as Omo I. Both pieces were found in Ethiopia's
Kibish formation. The bottom piece was found in 1967, when scientists
believed it was 130,000 years old. The top piece was found in
2001 as part of a study published in the Feb. 17, 2005 issue of
the journal Nature. In the study, scientists from the
University of Utah and elsewhere say Omo I actually lived about
195,000 years ago—the earliest known member of our species
Homo sapiens.
Photo
by John Fleagle, Stony Brook University

A
closeup of horizontal layers of rock in Ethiopia's Kibish Formation,
which yielded the oldest known fossils of the human species, Homo
sapiens. These rock beds likely were deposited by annual flooding
on the ancient Omo River. Beds below those shown here yielded
the oldest fossils of humans (Homo sapiens) ever found. They date
to 195,000 years ago.
Photo
by Frank Brown, University of Utah
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When the bones
of two early humans were found in 1967 near Kibish, Ethiopia, they
were thought to be 130,000 years old. A few years ago, researchers
found 154,000- to 160,000-year-old human bones at Herto, Ethiopia.
Now, a new study of the 1967 fossil site indicates the earliest
known members of our species, Homo sapiens, roamed Africa about
195,000 years ago.
"It
pushes back the beginning of anatomically modern humans,"
says geologist Frank Brown, a co-author of the study and dean of
the University of Utah's College of Mines and Earth Sciences.
The
journal Nature published the study in its Feb. 17, 2005,
issue. Brown conducted the research with geologist and geochronologist
Ian McDougall of Australian National University in Canberra, and
anthropologist John Fleagle of New York state's Stony Brook University.
The
researchers dated mineral crystals in volcanic ash layers above
and below layers of river sediments that contain the early human
bones. They conclude the fossils are much older than a 104,000-year-old
volcanic layer and very close in age to a 196,000-year-old layer,
says Brown. "These
are the oldest well-dated fossils of modern humans (Homo sapiens)
currently known anywhere in the world," the scientists say
in a summary of the study.
Significance
of an Earlier Emergence of Homo sapiens
Brown
says that pushing the emergence of Homo sapiens from about 160,000
years ago back to about 195,000 years ago "is significant because
the cultural aspects of humanity in most cases appear much later
in the record—only 50,000 years ago—which would mean
150,000 years of Homo sapiens without cultural stuff, such as evidence
of eating fish, of harpoons, nything to do with music (flutes and
that sort of thing), needles, even tools. This stuff all comes in
very late, except for stone knife blades, which appeared between
50,000 and 200,000 years ago, depending on whom you believe."
Fleagle
adds: "There is a huge debate in the archeological literature
regarding the first appearance of modern aspects of behavior such
as bone carving for religious reasons, or tools (harpoons and things),
ornamentation (bead jewelry and such), drawn images, arrowheads.
They only appear as a coherent package about 50,000 years ago, and
the first modern humansthat left Africa between 50,000 and 40,000
years ago seem to have had the full set. As modern human anatomy
is documented at earlier and earlier sites, it becomes evident that
there was a great time gap between the appearance of the modern
skeleton and ‘modern behavior.'"
The
study moves the date of human skulls found in Ethiopia's Kibish
rock formation in 1967 back from 130,000 years to a newly determined
date of 195,000 years ago, give or take 5,000 years. Fossils from
an individual known as Omo I look like bones of modern humans, but
other bones are from a more primitive ousin named Omo II.
In
addition to the cultural question, the earlier date for humanity's
emergence is important for other reasons.
"First,
it makes the dates in the fossil record almost exactly concordant
with the dates suggested by genetic studies for the origin of our
species," Fleagle says. "Second, it places the first
appearance of modern Homo sapiens in Africa many more thousands
of years before our species appears on any other continent. It lengthens
that gap. … Finally, the similar dating of the two skulls
indicates that when modern humans first ppeared there were other
contemporary populations [Omo II] that were less modern."
The
study was funded by the National Science Foundation, the L. S. B.
Leakey Foundation, the National Geographic Society and the Australian
National University.
Modern
Homo in the Valley of the Omo
Richard
Leakey and his team of paleontologists traveled in 1967 to the Kibish
Formation along the Omo River in southernmost Ethiopia, near the
town of Kibish. They found the skull (minus the face) and partial
skeleton (parts of arms, legs, feet and the elvis) of Omo I, and
the top and back of the skull of Omo II. Brown was not part of the
1967 expedition, but was working nearby and got to look at the site
and the fossils.
"Anthropologists
said they looked very different in their evolutionary status,"
Brown recalls. "Omo I appeared to be essentially modern Homo
sapiens, and Omo II appeared to be more primitive."
In
1967, the fossils were dated as being 130,000 years old, although
the scientists doubted the accuracy of their dating technique, which
was based on the decay of uranium-238 to horium-238 in oyster shells
from a rock layer near the skulls.
Fleagle
says no scientist has been bold enough to suggest Omo II is anything
other than Homo sapiens, and that "quite often at the time
of major events in evolution, one finds an increase in morphological
[anatomical] diversity." Now that the new study confirms Omo
I and Omo II are the same age—living within a few hundred
years of each other about 195,000 years ago—some anthropologist
suggest "maybe it [Omo II] isn't so primitive after all,"
Brown says.
McDougall,
Brown and Fleagle and researchers from other niversities returned
to Kibish in 1999, 2001, 2002 and 2003. They identified sites where
Omo I and Omo II were found in 1967, and obtained more of Omo I,
including part of the femur (upper leg bone) that fit a piece found
in 1967. They also found animal fossils and stone tools, and studied
local geology. The Nature study includes initial results
from those expeditions.
The
fossil record of human ancestors may go back 6 million years or
more, and the genus Homo arose at least 1.8 million years ago when
australopithecines evolved into human ancestors known as Homo habilis.
Brown says the fossil record of humans is poor from 00,000 to 500,000
years ago, so Omo I is significant because it now is well dated.
Dating
the Dawn of Humanity
Both
Omo I and Omo II were buried in the lowermost portion or "member"
of the Kibish Formation, a series of annual flood sediments laid
down rapidly by the ancient Omo River on the delta where it once
entered Lake Turkana. Lake levels now are much lower, and the river
enters the lake about 60 miles (100 kilometers) south of Kibish.
The
330-foot-thick (100-meter-thick) formation is divided into at east
four members, with each of the four sets of layers separated from
the other by an "unconformity," which represents a period
of time when rock eroded away instead of being deposited. For example,
the lowermost Kibish I member was deposited in layers as the Omo
River flooded each year. After thousands of years, rainfall diminished,
lake levels dropped, and the upper part of Kibish I eroded away.
Later, the lake rose and deposition resumed to create layers of
Kibish member II.
Interspersed
among the river sediments are occasional layers of volcanic ash
from ancient eruptions of nearby volcanoes. Some sh layers contain
chunks of pumice, which in turn contain feldspar mineral crystals.
Feldspar has small amounts of radioactive potassium-40, which decays
into argon-40 gas at a known rate. The gas, trapped inside feldspar
crystals, allows scientists to date the feldspar and the pumice
and ash encasing it.
Brown
says potassium-argon dating shows that a layer of ash no more than
10 feet (3 meters) below Omo I's and Omo II's burial
place is 196,000 years old, give or take 2,000 years. Another layer
is 104,000 years old. It is almost 160 feet (50 meters) bove the
layer that yielded the Omo humans. The unconformities represent
periods of time when rock was eroded, so the fossils must be much
older than the 104,000-year-old layer and close in age to the 196,000-year-old
layer, Brown says.
The
clinching evidence, he says, comes from sapropels, which are dark
rock layers on the Mediterranean seafloor that were deposited when
floods of fresh water poured out of the Nile River during rainy
times. The Blue Nile and White Nile tributaries share a drainage
divide with the Omo River. During ancient wet periods, monsoons
on the Ethiopian highlands sent annual floods surging own the Nile
system, causing sapropels to form on the seafloor, and sent floods
down the Omo, making Lake Turkana rise and depositing Kibish Formation
sediments on the river's ancient delta. (During dry periods,
Lake Turkana was smaller, flood sediments were deposited farther
south and rocks at Kibish were eroded.)
No
other sediments on land have been found to record wet and dry periods
that correlate so well with the same climate pattern in ocean sediments,
Brown says. The new study found that the "members"—or
groups of rock layers—of the Kibish formation ere laid down
at the same time as the Mediterranean sapropels. In particular,
the volcanic layer right beneath Omo I and II dates to 196,000 years
ago by potassium-argon dating, and it corresponds almost perfectly
to a sapropel layer previously dated as 195,000 years old, Brown
says.
"It
is pretty conclusive," says Brown, who disputes any contention
that the fossils might be closer to 104,000 years old.
University
of Utah News and Public Relations
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