(Image Source: The Guardian)

 

BY YUTAKA HAYASHI

You're watching multisource science video news analysis from Newsy.




Researchers claim to have found a direct ancestor of modern humans in a cave in South Africa. The fossils of this species -- called Australopithecus sediba displays the traits of both humans and apes, according to the International Business Times:

“The skeletons show an extraordinary mix of primitive, ape-like features like big body, long arms and tree-climbing skills, while also possessing traits of modern humans in the pelvis, hands, ankles and brain.”

So, what does that mean? What really makes this hominid so important? The BBC reports the apes are the most human-like of their time. Professor Lee Berger, who led the research project and discovered the fossils explains more:

“What we are looking at is the point of transition, where we move from relatively primitive creatures to something that is potentially stone-tool-using, there’s the potential origins of language, the way we think -- something that’s looking like us.”

Wall Street Journal Senior Science Editor Robert Lee Hotz says the openness of the anthropologists involved in discovering these fossils (what does this mean?), and the sheer number of fossils will probably fuel further developments:

“..it sheds a lot of light into - first time - into a really crucial period in our development which we know almost nothing about. I mean, prior to this the number of fossils from this time period, 2 mil years ago, you could fit into a shoe box. Secondly, it’s the number of fossils: you know you could build an entire PhD thesis, and an museum exhibit out of one tooth, right, in this kind of stuff. They have skulls, they have hands, legs, feet, a whole group, and they may have more they haven’t told us about yet.”

Although paleontologists agree this is a valuable finding -- not everyone thinks the new species is directly related to humans. A paleoanthropologist at George Washington University, Dr. Bernard Wood, tells the New York Times:

“....there was too little time for the small-brained, tree-climbing ape to evolve into the large-brained Homo erectus. More interesting, in his view, are the strange combinations of apelike and humanlike features that Dr. Berger’s team has described. The new fossils display the modular way in which evolution operates: they have mostly known features but in novel combinations that have never been seen before.”

Scientists continue to research the discovery to see if this is a whole new branch -- of the human family tree.



Transcript by Newsy. 

Sci/Health News

Fossils Reveal a New Human Ancestor

September 9, 2011
(2:19)
Researchers claim to have found a direct ancestor of modern humans in a cave in South Africa.
   
TRANSCRIPT

To leave a comment, please log in with Facebook Connect or your Newsy account. Register here to create one.
MOST RECENT|MOST POPULAR|MOST COMMENTED|HIGHEST RATED

Video from Google's Project Glass Released
Google released the first video from its Project Glass reality headset.
(1:15)
May 26, 2012
Top News Headlines: At Least 90 Dead in Syrian Attacks
More headlines: Drone strike kills suspected militants; Shooting spree in Finland; Pope's butler arrested.
(1:21)
May 26, 2012
Facebook Looking to Build Own Browser?
The social media giant may be interested in acquiring Opera Software, and grabbing their own browser in the process.
(1:29)
May 26, 2012
Nearly One Third Of Olympic Tickets Remain Unsold
Nearly a third of the London 2012 Olympic event tickets remain unsold.
(1:29)
May 26, 2012
Skydiver Survives Jump Without Parachute
A video of Gary Connery skydiving from 2,400 feet in the air without a parachute has gone viral.
(2:40)
May 26, 2012
15-Year-Old Boy Invents New Way to Detect Cancer
A 15-year-old Maryland boy won a $75,000 prize for inventing a dipstick sensor that can detect pancreatic cancer.
(1:53)
May 26, 2012
Prehistoric Flutes Date Back 40,000 Years
When scientists reanalyzed prehistoric artifacts from Germany, they discovered modern humans may have been in Europe earlier than previously thought.
(1:43)
May 26, 2012
Private Spacecraft Docks with International Space Station
SpaceX successfully docked its Dragon capsule into the International Space Station.
(2:40)
May 25, 2012
Bankia Suspends Shares; Multibillion Euro Bailout in Future?
The Spanish bank halts trading of its shares in advance of a board meeting. Bankia is expected to request a major bailout from the government.
(2:10)
May 25, 2012
Top News Headlines: Police Find Mother of Kids Left in Shed
More headlines: FBI identifies man in Miami plane incident; Hurricane Bud headed toward Mexico; Wall Street analysts look at Facebook's flop.
(1:24)
May 25, 2012
Exonerated Former Football Star Asks for Second Chance
After Brian Banks' rape conviction from 2002 was dismissed, he's asking NFL coaches for a chance to prove himself on the field.
(1:20)
May 25, 2012
Ukrainian Lawmakers Brawl Over Language Bill
A Ukrainian Parliament session erupted into a boxing match over the proposal to make Russian the official language of the eastern region.
(1:13)
May 25, 2012
Average Salary for CEO: $9.6 Million
According to an analysis from The Associated Press, the average salary for the head of a public company was $9.6 million in 2011.
(2:28)
May 25, 2012
Egyptian Election Pacing Toward Secular-Religious Showdown
Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Morsi and former air force chief Ahmed Shafiq poised to face off in second round.
(2:02)
May 25, 2012

Newsy

www3
...