现存分类群
人类进化
人科
最近的共同祖先
祖先
进化生物学
背景(考古学)
生物
克莱德
直立人
更新世
生物进化
古生物学
系统发育学
地理
考古
基因
生物化学
遗传学
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2009-10-01
卷期号:326 (5949): 74-74
被引量:332
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1175834
摘要
Referential models based on extant African apes have dominated reconstructions of early human evolution since Darwin’s time. These models visualize fundamental human behaviors as intensifications of behaviors observed in living chimpanzees and/or gorillas (for instance, upright feeding, male dominance displays, tool use, culture, hunting, and warfare). Ardipithecus essentially falsifies such models, because extant apes are highly derived relative to our last common ancestors. Moreover, uniquely derived hominid characters, especially those of locomotion and canine reduction, appear to have emerged shortly after the hominid/chimpanzee divergence. Hence, Ardipithecus provides a new window through which to view our clade’s earliest evolution and its ecological context. Early hominids and extant apes are remarkably divergent in many cardinal characters. We can no longer rely on homologies with African apes for accounts of our origins and must turn instead to general evolutionary theory. A proposed adaptive suite for the emergence of Ardipithecus from the last common ancestor that we shared with chimpanzees accounts for these principal ape/human differences, as well as the marked demographic success and cognitive efflorescence of later Plio-Pleistocene hominids.
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