New Discoveries
of Homo erectus from Dmanisi, Republic of Georgia

Photos courtesy
of Professor David Lordkipanidze, Deputy Director, Georgian State Museum
Beginning in
the early 1990s, a few hominid remains were found, but the most informative
specimens are three well-preserved crania, the most recently discovered
(in 2001) being almost complete (see photos). These remains (all dated
to approximately 1.8 m.y.a.) are important because they are the best
preserved hominids of this antiquity found anywhere outside of
Africa. Moreover, they show a mixed pattern of characteristics, some
quite unexpected.
In some respects
the Dmanisi crania are similar to H. erectus (for example, the
long, low vault, wide base, and thickening along the sagittal midline).
In other characteristics, however, the Dmanisi individuals are different
from other hominid finds outside of Africa. In particular, the most
complete specimen (No. 2700) has a less robust and thinner browridge,
a projecting lower face, and a large upper canine. Thus, at least from
the front, this skull is highly reminiscent of the smaller early Homo
specimens from East Africa more so than of Homo erectus.
Moreover, cranial capacity if this individual is very small (estimated
at only 600 cm3 , well within the range of early Homo). In fact,
all three Dmanisi crania show small cranial capacities (the other two
estimated at 650 and 780 cm3).
A number of
stone tools have also been recovered at Dmanisi. The tools are similar
to early African implements and are quite different from the ostensibly
more advanced technology of the Acheulian (the latter broadly associated
with H. erectus in much of the Old World).
From these recent,
somewhat startling revelations from Dmanisi several questions can be
raised:
1) Was Homo erectus
the first hominid to leave Africa -- or was it an earlier form of
Homo?
2) Did hominids require
a large brain and sophisticated stone-tool culture to disperse out
of Africa?
3) Was the large, robust
body build of H. erectus a necessary adaptation to disperse
initially into Eurasia.
4) Did, in fact, H.
erectus evolve primarily in Eurasia and then migrate back
to Africa?
Of
course, the Dmanisi discoveries are very new, so any conclusions we
draw must be seen as highly tentative. Nevertheless, the recent evidence
raises important and exciting possibilities. In regards to Question
1, it now seems likely the first trans-continental hominid migrants
were a form of early Homo (similar to the smaller East African
species, Homo habilis). At best, and as exemplified at Dmanisi,
the first hominids to leave Africa were a very early form of H. erectus,
one much more primitive than any of the other specimens from Africa,
Asia, or Europe discussed above.
As for question
2, certainly the smaller individuals from Dmanisi did not have a large
brain (by H. erectus standards), nor did they have an advanced
stone tool culture (possessing tools very similar to the earliest ones
from East and South Africa).
Question 3 concerns
body size and proportions, but is more speculative than the two above
queries. Very little postcranial material has been found thus far at
Dmanisi, so we do not know as yet the body structure of the earliest
hominids to leave Africa. It is possible, however, that the overall
body proportions (as with the face of the smallest Dmanisi cranium)
resemble Homo habilis more than they do H. erectus. Thus,
these first pioneers to leave Africa may have been, in the words of
Phillip Rightmire (of the University of Binghamton and a co-author of
the first article announcing the 2001 Dmanisi discovery), little
people. That is, they may have been very different from the big-bodied,
long-legged, full-blown H. erectus body plan.
And,
lastly, where did the full-blown H. erectus morphology first
evolve? For decades it has been widely assumed H. erectus evolved
first in Africa and then emigrated to elsewhere in the Old World. Hence,
now the teasing possibility exists that H. erectus evolved primarily
in Eurasia and (only after attaining its fully characteristic morphology)
did it migrate back into Africa (as perhaps the Bouri cranium, dated
to 1 m.y.a. suggests?).
References
Vekua, Abesalom,
David Lordkipanidze, G. Phillip Rightmire, et al.
2002 A New Skull of Early Homo rom Dmanisi, Georgia.
Science, 297:85-89.
Balter, Michael
and Ann Gibbons
2002 Were Little People the First to Venture Out of
Africa? Science, 297:26-27.

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