Ethiopia - Ancient jawbones put new species on the human family tree.

Tulessa

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2009
Messages
23,016
Reaction score
125,582
  • #1
  • #2
I'm convinced that the evolution of homo sapiens was multi-faceted rather than strictly linear.

But I wonder how scientists can confidently identify a new species on the basis of a single jawbone. What if they found the partial skeleton of someone like John Merrick (the "Elephant Man") dating from millions of years ago? Would they identify HIM as a separate species?
 
  • #3
I'm convinced that the evolution of homo sapiens was multi-faceted rather than strictly linear.

But I wonder how scientists can confidently identify a new species on the basis of a single jawbone. What if they found the partial skeleton of someone like John Merrick (the "Elephant Man") dating from millions of years ago? Would they identify HIM as a separate species?

Nova, I was thinking of you and woofy when I posted this. That's a good question. I just don't have the answer.
 
  • #4
Well, bless your cotton-pickin' heart, Tulessa!

How kind of you to think of me when paleontologists find the "missing link"!

Harumph! ;)
 
  • #5
I could well be wrong, Tulessa, but maybe they assume for their hypothesis that the jawbone is "typical" of the subspecies. Then they look for other bones to confirm the existence of said subspecies.

This isn't my field, but this is my best guess based on my liberal arts education.
 

Guardians Monthly Goal

Staff online

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
170
Guests online
2,095
Total visitors
2,265

Forum statistics

Threads
636,055
Messages
18,689,480
Members
243,504
Latest member
Cliff777
Back
Top