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Roger Lee Bagula
Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 9:01 am
Guest
http://www.world-science.net/exclusives/070326_evolution.htm
Human evolution, radically reappraised

March 26, 2007
Special to World Science

Hu­man ev­o­lu­tion has been speed­ing up ex­orb­i­tant­ly, a new study
con­tends—so much, that the lat­est ev­o­lu­tion­ary changes seem to
large­ly ec­lipse ear­l­ier ones that ac­com­pa­nied mod­ern man’s
“ori­gin.”



Hom­i­nid skulls. Top: Ho­mo erec­tus dat­ed to 1.75 mil­lion years ago;
Mid­dle: an ear­ly "modern" Ho­mo sapi­ens dat­ed to 160,000 years ago;
Bot­tom: a con­tem­po­rary hu­man. (Credits: top, Science magazine;
middle, Tim White; bottom, NIH).
The stu­dy, along­side oth­er recent re­search on which it builds,
amounts to a sweep­ing re­ap­prais­al of tra­di­tion­al ac­counts of
hu­man ev­o­lu­tion. These gen­eral­ly as­sumed that hu­mans have
reached a pin­na­cle of ev­o­lu­tion and stopped there.

The find­ings sug­gest that not on­ly is our ev­o­lu­tion con­tin­u­ing:
in a sense our very “orig­in” can be seen as on­go­ing, a ge­net­i­cist
not in­volved in the work said.

Greg­o­ry Coch­ran of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah,
a co-author of the lat­est stu­dy, said the re­search may force a
rad­i­cal re­think­ing of the sto­ry of mod­ern hu­man ev­o­lu­tion. “It
turns it up­side-down, pret­ty much,” he said.

The tra­di­tion­al view of hu­mans as a fi­n­ished prod­uct be­gan to
erode in re­cent years, sci­en­t­ists said, with a crop of stud­ies
sug­gesting our ev­o­lu­tion in­deed goes on. But the new­est study goes
fur­ther. It claims the pro­cess has ac­tu­al­ly ac­cel­er­at­ed.

It al­so down­plays the im­por­tance of a much-scru­ti­nized era around
200,000 years ago, when hu­mans con­sid­ered “ana­tom­i­cally mod­ern”
first ap­pear in the fos­sil rec­ord. In the stu­dy, this ep­och
e­merges as just part of a vast arc of ac­cel­e­rat­ing change.

“The or­i­gin of mod­ern hu­mans was a mi­nor event com­pared to more
re­cent ev­o­lu­tion­ary chang­es,” wrote the au­thors of the re­search,
in a pre­sent­a­tion slated for Fri­day in Phi­l­a­del­phia at the
an­nu­al meet­ing of the Amer­i­can As­so­ci­a­tion of Phys­i­cal
An­th­ro­po­l­o­g­ists.

The au­thors are Coch­ran and an­thro­po­l­o­gist John Hawks of the
Uni­ver­si­ty of Wis­con­sin-Ma­d­i­son. The find­ings will also be
sub­mitted to one or more sci­en­t­i­f­ic jour­nals, Coch­ran said.

The pro­pos­al is “truly fas­ci­nat­ing,” wrote Uni­ver­si­ty of
Chica­go ge­net­i­cist Bruce Lahn in an e­mail. He was­n’t in­volved in
the work, though he did con­duct ear­li­er re­search find­ing that
ev­o­lu­tion may still be on­go­ing in the brain.

Even be­fore the Hawks-Cochran study and its im­me­di­ate fore­run­ners,
Lahn wrote, sci­en­tists had al­ready not­ed a trend of ac­ce­le­rating
change in the ev­o­lu­tion­ary line­age lead­ing to mod­ern hu­mans from
ape-like an­ces­tors. But that phe­nom­e­non seemed to have oc­curred
over time spans meas­ured in mil­lions of years; it was far from clear
that it has con­tin­ued in the re­cent past or to­day, he added.

Hawks and Cochran, by con­t­rast, ar­gue that the trend “is vis­i­ble
even in the last tens of thou­sands of years,” Lahn wrote. It “runs
count­er to the feel­ing in some quar­ters that the ev­o­lu­tion of the
hu­man phe­no­type [form] has slowed down or even stopped in our re­cent
past.”

If the study is cor­rect, it raises new ques­tions about how to de­fine
the “orig­in” of mod­ern hu­mans—a rath­er ar­bi­trary de­ci­sion in any
case, Lahn re­marked.

The or­i­gin is “de­fined prob­a­bly more as a mat­ter of con­ven­ience
rath­er than re­flect­ing any ac­tu­al wa­ter­shed ev­o­lu­tion­ary
event,” he wrote. That is, it’s “use­ful to say that any past crea­tures
that are with­in cer­tain lev­els of sim­i­lar­i­ties to us to­day
should be con­sid­ered as ‘the same’ as us.”

But if the changes that ac­com­pa­nied this event are on­ly a tri­fling
part of a wid­er trend, he added, it be­comes rea­son­a­ble to ask
wheth­er that fur­ther de­flates the ra­tion­ale for call­ing it an
or­i­gin.

“In a sense,” he wrote, one could say “the or­i­gin is still on­go­ing.”

Ev­o­lu­tion oc­curs when an in­di­vid­ual ac­quires a ben­e­fi­cial
ge­net­ic mu­ta­tion, and it spreads through­out the pop­u­la­tion
be­cause those with it thrive and re­pro­duce more. Cease­less
repe­ti­tions of this can change spe­cies, or pro­duce new ones. As
ben­e­fi­cial genes spread, harm­ful ones are weeded out; the whole
pro­cess, called nat­u­ral se­lec­tion, pro­pels ev­o­lu­tion.

Hawks and Cochran an­a­lyzed mea­sure­ments of skulls from Eu­rope,
Jor­dan, Nu­bia, South Af­ri­ca, and Chi­na in the past 10,000 years, a
pe­ri­od known as the Hol­o­cene era. They al­so stud­ied Eu­ro­pean and
West Asian skulls from the end of the Pleis­to­cene era, which lasted
from two mil­lion years ago un­til the Hol­o­cene.

“A con­stel­la­tion of fea­tures” changed across the board, Hawks and
Cochran wrote in their pres­en­ta­tion. “Hol­o­cene changes were
si­m­i­lar in pat­tern and... faster than those at the archaic-mod­ern
tran­si­tion,” the time when so-called mod­ern hu­mans ap­peared. But
these changes “them­selves were rap­id com­pared to ear­li­er hom­i­nid
ev­o­lu­tion.” Ho­minids are a fam­i­ly of pri­ma­tes that in­cludes
hu­mans and their upright-walking, more ape-like an­ces­tors and
rel­a­tives, all ex­tinct.

Hawks and Cochran al­so ana­lyzed past ge­net­ic stud­ies to es­ti­mate
the rate of prod­uction of genes that un­der­go pos­i­tive
se­lec­tion—that is, genes that spread be­cause they are ben­e­fi­cial.
“The rate of gene­ration of pos­i­tively se­lected genes has in­creased
as much as a hun­dred­fold dur­ing the past 40,000 years,” they wrote.

Among the most no­ta­ble phys­i­cal changes have been ones af­fect­ing
the size of the brain case, ac­cord­ing to Hawks and Coch­ran.

A “thing that should prob­a­bly wor­ry peo­ple is that brains have been
get­ting smaller for 20,000 to 30,000 years,” said Cochran. But growth
in more ad­vanced brain ar­eas might have com­pen­sat­ed for this, he
added. He spec­u­lated that an al­most break­neck ev­o­lu­tion of
high­er fore­heads in some peo­ples may re­flect this. A study in the
Jan. 14 Brit­ish Den­tal Jour­nal found such a trend vis­i­ble in
Eng­land in just the past mil­len­ni­um, he noted, a mere eye­blink in
ev­o­lu­tionary time.

Research pub­lished in the Sept. 9, 2005 is­sue of the re­search
jour­nal Sci­ence by Lahn and col­leagues found that two genes linked to
brain size are rap­idly evolv­ing in hu­mans.

An­thro­po­l­o­gist Jef­frey Mc­Kee of Ohio State Uni­ver­si­ty said the
new find­ings of ac­ce­l­er­ated evolution bear out pre­dic­tions he
made in a 2000 book The Rid­dled Chain. Based on com­put­er mod­els, he
ar­gued that ev­o­lu­tion should speed up as a pop­u­la­tion grows. This
is be­cause pop­u­la­tion growth cre­ates more op­por­tu­ni­ties for new
mu­ta­tions; al­so, the ex­pand­ed pop­u­la­tion oc­cu­pies new
en­vi­ron­men­tal niches, which would drive ev­o­lu­tion in new
di­rec­tions.

Lahn said he’s not con­vinced that the ac­cel­er­at­ed phys­i­cal
ev­o­lu­tion is tied to pop­u­la­tion growth. “It may be a long way
be­fore” an­yone can test the truth of this, he wrote.

But oth­er fac­tors could al­so ex­plain an accele­ration, ac­cord­ing
to an­thro­po­l­o­gist John Kings­ton of Em­o­ry Uni­ver­si­ty in
At­lan­ta, Ga. Ev­o­lu­tion might speed up be­cause we have changed our
own en­vi­ronment, which in turn changes the ev­o­lu­tion­ary
pres­sures. “We now con­trol our own en­vi­ronment and ecol­o­gy to some
ex­tent,” he said.

For instance, if you in­vent spears, you per­haps can af­ford to be
slight­er-framed be­cause you can stand fur­ther away from wild
an­i­mals, Coch­ran said. He ar­gued that a pow­er­ful syn­er­gy
be­tween these sorts of changes and expand­ing pop­u­la­tion ex­plains
the “fant­as­tic­ally ra­pid” re­cent evo­lu­tion.

Ove­rall, the find­ings could amount to “a very big change” in
tra­di­tion­al think­ing for two rea­sons, ac­cord­ing to Mc­Kee. First,
he said, many re­search­ers had mis­tak­en­ly as­sumed pop­u­la­tion
growth would slow down ev­o­lu­tion, be­cause new mu­ta­tions would take
too long to spread through a large pop­u­la­tion.

Sec­ond, the find­ings deal a fi­nal blow to a lin­ger­ing view among
an­thro­po­l­o­gists of ev­o­lu­tion as a lad­der “with us as the
be-all-end-all,” he said. That idea went out of fash­ion in the 1950s
but still per­sists “in the backs of our minds,” he added.

Many of the changes found in the ge­nome or fos­sil rec­ord re­flect
me­tab­o­lic alt­er­a­tions to ad­just to ag­ri­cul­tur­al life, Cochran
said. Oth­er changes simp­ly make us weaker.

In the June 2003 is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Cur­rent
An­thro­po­l­ogy, Hel­en Leach of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ota­go, New
Zea­land wrote that skele­tons from some pop­u­la­tions in the hu­man
line­age have un­der­gone a pro­gres­sive shrink­age and weak­en­ing,
and re­duc­tion in tooth size, si­m­i­lar to changes seen in
do­mes­ti­cat­ed an­i­mals. Hu­mans seem to have do­mes­ti­cat­ed
them­selves, she ar­gued, caus­ing phys­i­cal as well as men­tal changes.

De­spite all the alte­rations, Mc­Kee said he be­lieves the no­tion of
an “o­rig­in” of mod­ern hu­mans around 200,000 years ago re­mains
use­ful. “It’s just a thresh­old point” at which hu­mans take on most of
the phys­i­cal fea­tures we rec­og­nize, he re­marked, and as such,
need­n’t be dis­carded. Coch­ran said it can still be ar­gued that the
key change was lang­uage; but when this ori­gi­nated re­mains far from
clear.

What­ever the imp­li­ca­tions of the recent findings, McKee added, they
high­light a ubiq­ui­tous point about ev­o­lu­tion: “every spe­cies is a
tran­si­tion­al spe­cies.”
James Michael Howard
Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 8:03 am
Guest
On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 14:01:48 GMT, Roger Lee Bagula <rlbagulatftn@yahoo.com>
wrote:

Quote:
http://www.world-science.net/exclusives/070326_evolution.htm
Human evolution, radically reappraised

March 26, 2007
Special to World Science

Hu­man ev­o­lu­tion has been speed­ing up ex­orb­i­tant­ly, a new study
con­tends—so much, that the lat­est ev­o­lu­tion­ary changes seem to
large­ly ec­lipse ear­l­ier ones that ac­com­pa­nied mod­ern man’s
“ori­gin.”



Hom­i­nid skulls. Top: Ho­mo erec­tus dat­ed to 1.75 mil­lion years ago;
Mid­dle: an ear­ly "modern" Ho­mo sapi­ens dat­ed to 160,000 years ago;
Bot­tom: a con­tem­po­rary hu­man. (Credits: top, Science magazine;
middle, Tim White; bottom, NIH).
The stu­dy, along­side oth­er recent re­search on which it builds,
amounts to a sweep­ing re­ap­prais­al of tra­di­tion­al ac­counts of
hu­man ev­o­lu­tion. These gen­eral­ly as­sumed that hu­mans have
reached a pin­na­cle of ev­o­lu­tion and stopped there.

The find­ings sug­gest that not on­ly is our ev­o­lu­tion con­tin­u­ing:
in a sense our very “orig­in” can be seen as on­go­ing, a ge­net­i­cist
not in­volved in the work said.

Greg­o­ry Coch­ran of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah,
a co-author of the lat­est stu­dy, said the re­search may force a
rad­i­cal re­think­ing of the sto­ry of mod­ern hu­man ev­o­lu­tion. “It
turns it up­side-down, pret­ty much,” he said.

The tra­di­tion­al view of hu­mans as a fi­n­ished prod­uct be­gan to
erode in re­cent years, sci­en­t­ists said, with a crop of stud­ies
sug­gesting our ev­o­lu­tion in­deed goes on. But the new­est study goes
fur­ther. It claims the pro­cess has ac­tu­al­ly ac­cel­er­at­ed.

It al­so down­plays the im­por­tance of a much-scru­ti­nized era around
200,000 years ago, when hu­mans con­sid­ered “ana­tom­i­cally mod­ern”
first ap­pear in the fos­sil rec­ord. In the stu­dy, this ep­och
e­merges as just part of a vast arc of ac­cel­e­rat­ing change.

“The or­i­gin of mod­ern hu­mans was a mi­nor event com­pared to more
re­cent ev­o­lu­tion­ary chang­es,” wrote the au­thors of the re­search,
in a pre­sent­a­tion slated for Fri­day in Phi­l­a­del­phia at the
an­nu­al meet­ing of the Amer­i­can As­so­ci­a­tion of Phys­i­cal
An­th­ro­po­l­o­g­ists.

The au­thors are Coch­ran and an­thro­po­l­o­gist John Hawks of the
Uni­ver­si­ty of Wis­con­sin-Ma­d­i­son. The find­ings will also be
sub­mitted to one or more sci­en­t­i­f­ic jour­nals, Coch­ran said.

The pro­pos­al is “truly fas­ci­nat­ing,” wrote Uni­ver­si­ty of
Chica­go ge­net­i­cist Bruce Lahn in an e­mail. He was­n’t in­volved in
the work, though he did con­duct ear­li­er re­search find­ing that
ev­o­lu­tion may still be on­go­ing in the brain.

Even be­fore the Hawks-Cochran study and its im­me­di­ate fore­run­ners,
Lahn wrote, sci­en­tists had al­ready not­ed a trend of ac­ce­le­rating
change in the ev­o­lu­tion­ary line­age lead­ing to mod­ern hu­mans from
ape-like an­ces­tors. But that phe­nom­e­non seemed to have oc­curred
over time spans meas­ured in mil­lions of years; it was far from clear
that it has con­tin­ued in the re­cent past or to­day, he added.

Hawks and Cochran, by con­t­rast, ar­gue that the trend “is vis­i­ble
even in the last tens of thou­sands of years,” Lahn wrote. It “runs
count­er to the feel­ing in some quar­ters that the ev­o­lu­tion of the
hu­man phe­no­type [form] has slowed down or even stopped in our re­cent
past.”

If the study is cor­rect, it raises new ques­tions about how to de­fine
the “orig­in” of mod­ern hu­mans—a rath­er ar­bi­trary de­ci­sion in any
case, Lahn re­marked.

The or­i­gin is “de­fined prob­a­bly more as a mat­ter of con­ven­ience
rath­er than re­flect­ing any ac­tu­al wa­ter­shed ev­o­lu­tion­ary
event,” he wrote. That is, it’s “use­ful to say that any past crea­tures
that are with­in cer­tain lev­els of sim­i­lar­i­ties to us to­day
should be con­sid­ered as ‘the same’ as us.”

But if the changes that ac­com­pa­nied this event are on­ly a tri­fling
part of a wid­er trend, he added, it be­comes rea­son­a­ble to ask
wheth­er that fur­ther de­flates the ra­tion­ale for call­ing it an
or­i­gin.

“In a sense,” he wrote, one could say “the or­i­gin is still on­go­ing.”

Ev­o­lu­tion oc­curs when an in­di­vid­ual ac­quires a ben­e­fi­cial
ge­net­ic mu­ta­tion, and it spreads through­out the pop­u­la­tion
be­cause those with it thrive and re­pro­duce more. Cease­less
repe­ti­tions of this can change spe­cies, or pro­duce new ones. As
ben­e­fi­cial genes spread, harm­ful ones are weeded out; the whole
pro­cess, called nat­u­ral se­lec­tion, pro­pels ev­o­lu­tion.

Hawks and Cochran an­a­lyzed mea­sure­ments of skulls from Eu­rope,
Jor­dan, Nu­bia, South Af­ri­ca, and Chi­na in the past 10,000 years, a
pe­ri­od known as the Hol­o­cene era. They al­so stud­ied Eu­ro­pean and
West Asian skulls from the end of the Pleis­to­cene era, which lasted
from two mil­lion years ago un­til the Hol­o­cene.

“A con­stel­la­tion of fea­tures” changed across the board, Hawks and
Cochran wrote in their pres­en­ta­tion. “Hol­o­cene changes were
si­m­i­lar in pat­tern and... faster than those at the archaic-mod­ern
tran­si­tion,” the time when so-called mod­ern hu­mans ap­peared. But
these changes “them­selves were rap­id com­pared to ear­li­er hom­i­nid
ev­o­lu­tion.” Ho­minids are a fam­i­ly of pri­ma­tes that in­cludes
hu­mans and their upright-walking, more ape-like an­ces­tors and
rel­a­tives, all ex­tinct.

Hawks and Cochran al­so ana­lyzed past ge­net­ic stud­ies to es­ti­mate
the rate of prod­uction of genes that un­der­go pos­i­tive
se­lec­tion—that is, genes that spread be­cause they are ben­e­fi­cial.
“The rate of gene­ration of pos­i­tively se­lected genes has in­creased
as much as a hun­dred­fold dur­ing the past 40,000 years,” they wrote.

Among the most no­ta­ble phys­i­cal changes have been ones af­fect­ing
the size of the brain case, ac­cord­ing to Hawks and Coch­ran.

A “thing that should prob­a­bly wor­ry peo­ple is that brains have been
get­ting smaller for 20,000 to 30,000 years,” said Cochran. But growth
in more ad­vanced brain ar­eas might have com­pen­sat­ed for this, he
added. He spec­u­lated that an al­most break­neck ev­o­lu­tion of
high­er fore­heads in some peo­ples may re­flect this. A study in the
Jan. 14 Brit­ish Den­tal Jour­nal found such a trend vis­i­ble in
Eng­land in just the past mil­len­ni­um, he noted, a mere eye­blink in
ev­o­lu­tionary time.

Research pub­lished in the Sept. 9, 2005 is­sue of the re­search
jour­nal Sci­ence by Lahn and col­leagues found that two genes linked to
brain size are rap­idly evolv­ing in hu­mans.

An­thro­po­l­o­gist Jef­frey Mc­Kee of Ohio State Uni­ver­si­ty said the
new find­ings of ac­ce­l­er­ated evolution bear out pre­dic­tions he
made in a 2000 book The Rid­dled Chain. Based on com­put­er mod­els, he
ar­gued that ev­o­lu­tion should speed up as a pop­u­la­tion grows. This
is be­cause pop­u­la­tion growth cre­ates more op­por­tu­ni­ties for new
mu­ta­tions; al­so, the ex­pand­ed pop­u­la­tion oc­cu­pies new
en­vi­ron­men­tal niches, which would drive ev­o­lu­tion in new
di­rec­tions.

Lahn said he’s not con­vinced that the ac­cel­er­at­ed phys­i­cal
ev­o­lu­tion is tied to pop­u­la­tion growth. “It may be a long way
be­fore” an­yone can test the truth of this, he wrote.

But oth­er fac­tors could al­so ex­plain an accele­ration, ac­cord­ing
to an­thro­po­l­o­gist John Kings­ton of Em­o­ry Uni­ver­si­ty in
At­lan­ta, Ga. Ev­o­lu­tion might speed up be­cause we have changed our
own en­vi­ronment, which in turn changes the ev­o­lu­tion­ary
pres­sures. “We now con­trol our own en­vi­ronment and ecol­o­gy to some
ex­tent,” he said.

For instance, if you in­vent spears, you per­haps can af­ford to be
slight­er-framed be­cause you can stand fur­ther away from wild
an­i­mals, Coch­ran said. He ar­gued that a pow­er­ful syn­er­gy
be­tween these sorts of changes and expand­ing pop­u­la­tion ex­plains
the “fant­as­tic­ally ra­pid” re­cent evo­lu­tion.

Ove­rall, the find­ings could amount to “a very big change” in
tra­di­tion­al think­ing for two rea­sons, ac­cord­ing to Mc­Kee. First,
he said, many re­search­ers had mis­tak­en­ly as­sumed pop­u­la­tion
growth would slow down ev­o­lu­tion, be­cause new mu­ta­tions would take
too long to spread through a large pop­u­la­tion.

Sec­ond, the find­ings deal a fi­nal blow to a lin­ger­ing view among
an­thro­po­l­o­gists of ev­o­lu­tion as a lad­der “with us as the
be-all-end-all,” he said. That idea went out of fash­ion in the 1950s
but still per­sists “in the backs of our minds,” he added.

Many of the changes found in the ge­nome or fos­sil rec­ord re­flect
me­tab­o­lic alt­er­a­tions to ad­just to ag­ri­cul­tur­al life, Cochran
said. Oth­er changes simp­ly make us weaker.

In the June 2003 is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Cur­rent
An­thro­po­l­ogy, Hel­en Leach of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ota­go, New
Zea­land wrote that skele­tons from some pop­u­la­tions in the hu­man
line­age have un­der­gone a pro­gres­sive shrink­age and weak­en­ing,
and re­duc­tion in tooth size, si­m­i­lar to changes seen in
do­mes­ti­cat­ed an­i­mals. Hu­mans seem to have do­mes­ti­cat­ed
them­selves, she ar­gued, caus­ing phys­i­cal as well as men­tal changes.

De­spite all the alte­rations, Mc­Kee said he be­lieves the no­tion of
an “o­rig­in” of mod­ern hu­mans around 200,000 years ago re­mains
use­ful. “It’s just a thresh­old point” at which hu­mans take on most of
the phys­i­cal fea­tures we rec­og­nize, he re­marked, and as such,
need­n’t be dis­carded. Coch­ran said it can still be ar­gued that the
key change was lang­uage; but when this ori­gi­nated re­mains far from
clear.

What­ever the imp­li­ca­tions of the recent findings, McKee added, they
high­light a ubiq­ui­tous point about ev­o­lu­tion: “every spe­cies is a
tran­si­tion­al spe­cies.”


I invite you to read "Androgens in Human Evolution," Rivista di Biologia /
Biology Forum 2001; 94: 345-362) or read it at
www.anthropogeny.com/evolution.html .

James Michael Howard
Day Brown
Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:17 pm
Guest
On Mar 27, 8:01 am, Roger Lee Bagula <rlbagulat...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote:
http://www.world-science.net/exclusives/070326_evolution.htm
Human evolution, radically reappraised

March 26, 2007
Special to World Science

Hu­man ev­o­lu­tion has been speed­ing up ex­orb­i­tant­ly, a new study
con­tends-so much, that the lat­est ev­o­lu­tion­ary changes seem to
large­ly ec­lipse ear­l­ier ones that ac­com­pa­nied mod­ern man's
"ori­gin."

Hom­i­nid skulls. Top: Ho­mo erec­tus dat­ed to 1.75 mil­lion years ago;
Mid­dle: an ear­ly "modern" Ho­mo sapi­ens dat­ed to 160,000 years ago;
Bot­tom: a con­tem­po­rary hu­man. (Credits: top, Science magazine;
middle, Tim White; bottom, NIH).
The stu­dy, along­side oth­er recent re­search on which it builds,
amounts to a sweep­ing re­ap­prais­al of tra­di­tion­al ac­counts of
hu­man ev­o­lu­tion. These gen­eral­ly as­sumed that hu­mans have
reached a pin­na­cle of ev­o­lu­tion and stopped there.

The find­ings sug­gest that not on­ly is our ev­o­lu­tion con­tin­u­ing:
in a sense our very "orig­in" can be seen as on­go­ing, a ge­net­i­cist
not in­volved in the work said.

Greg­o­ry Coch­ran of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah,
a co-author of the lat­est stu­dy, said the re­search may force a
rad­i­cal re­think­ing of the sto­ry of mod­ern hu­man ev­o­lu­tion. "It
turns it up­side-down, pret­ty much," he said.

The tra­di­tion­al view of hu­mans as a fi­n­ished prod­uct be­gan to
erode in re­cent years, sci­en­t­ists said, with a crop of stud­ies
sug­gesting our ev­o­lu­tion in­deed goes on. But the new­est study goes
fur­ther. It claims the pro­cess has ac­tu­al­ly ac­cel­er­at­ed.

It al­so down­plays the im­por­tance of a much-scru­ti­nized era around
200,000 years ago, when hu­mans con­sid­ered "ana­tom­i­cally mod­ern"
first ap­pear in the fos­sil rec­ord. In the stu­dy, this ep­och
e­merges as just part of a vast arc of ac­cel­e­rat­ing change.

"The or­i­gin of mod­ern hu­mans was a mi­nor event com­pared to more
re­cent ev­o­lu­tion­ary chang­es," wrote the au­thors of the re­search,
in a pre­sent­a­tion slated for Fri­day in Phi­l­a­del­phia at the
an­nu­al meet­ing of the Amer­i­can As­so­ci­a­tion of Phys­i­cal
An­th­ro­po­l­o­g­ists.

The au­thors are Coch­ran and an­thro­po­l­o­gist John Hawks of the
Uni­ver­si­ty of Wis­con­sin-Ma­d­i­son. The find­ings will also be
sub­mitted to one or more sci­en­t­i­f­ic jour­nals, Coch­ran said.

The pro­pos­al is "truly fas­ci­nat­ing," wrote Uni­ver­si­ty of
Chica­go ge­net­i­cist Bruce Lahn in an e­mail. He was­n't in­volved in
the work, though he did con­duct ear­li­er re­search find­ing that
ev­o­lu­tion may still be on­go­ing in the brain.

Even be­fore the Hawks-Cochran study and its im­me­di­ate fore­run­ners,
Lahn wrote, sci­en­tists had al­ready not­ed a trend of ac­ce­le­rating
change in the ev­o­lu­tion­ary line­age lead­ing to mod­ern hu­mans from
ape-like an­ces­tors. But that phe­nom­e­non seemed to have oc­curred
over time spans meas­ured in mil­lions of years; it was far from clear
that it has con­tin­ued in the re­cent past or to­day, he added.

Hawks and Cochran, by con­t­rast, ar­gue that the trend "is vis­i­ble
even in the last tens of thou­sands of years," Lahn wrote. It "runs
count­er to the feel­ing in some quar­ters that the ev­o­lu­tion of the
hu­man phe­no­type [form] has slowed down or even stopped in our re­cent
past."

If the study is cor­rect, it raises new ques­tions about how to de­fine
the "orig­in" of mod­ern hu­mans-a rath­er ar­bi­trary de­ci­sion in any
case, Lahn re­marked.

The or­i­gin is "de­fined prob­a­bly more as a mat­ter of con­ven­ience
rath­er than re­flect­ing any ac­tu­al wa­ter­shed ev­o­lu­tion­ary
event," he wrote. That is, it's "use­ful to say that any past crea­tures
that are with­in cer­tain lev­els of sim­i­lar­i­ties to us to­day
should be con­sid­ered as 'the same' as us."

But if the changes that ac­com­pa­nied this event are on­ly a tri­fling
part of a wid­er trend, he added, it be­comes rea­son­a­ble to ask
wheth­er that fur­ther de­flates the ra­tion­ale for call­ing it an
or­i­gin.

"In a sense," he wrote, one could say "the or­i­gin is still on­go­ing."

Ev­o­lu­tion oc­curs when an in­di­vid­ual ac­quires a ben­e­fi­cial
ge­net­ic mu­ta­tion, and it spreads through­out the pop­u­la­tion
be­cause those with it thrive and re­pro­duce more. Cease­less
repe­ti­tions of this can change spe­cies, or pro­duce new ones. As
ben­e­fi­cial genes spread, harm­ful ones are weeded out; the whole
pro­cess, called nat­u­ral se­lec­tion, pro­pels ev­o­lu­tion.

Hawks and Cochran an­a­lyzed mea­sure­ments of skulls from Eu­rope,
Jor­dan, Nu­bia, South Af­ri­ca, and Chi­na in the past 10,000 years, a
pe­ri­od known as the Hol­o­cene era. They al­so stud­ied Eu­ro­pean and
West Asian skulls from the end of the Pleis­to­cene era, which lasted
from two mil­lion years ago un­til the Hol­o­cene.

"A con­stel­la­tion of fea­tures" changed across the board, Hawks and
Cochran wrote in their pres­en­ta­tion. "Hol­o­cene changes were
si­m­i­lar in pat­tern and... faster than those at the archaic-mod­ern
tran­si­tion," the time when so-called mod­ern hu­mans ap­peared. But
these changes "them­selves were rap­id com­pared to ear­li­er hom­i­nid
ev­o­lu­tion." Ho­minids are a fam­i­ly of pri­ma­tes that in­cludes
hu­mans and their upright-walking, more ape-like an­ces­tors and
rel­a­tives, all ex­tinct.

Hawks and Cochran al­so ana­lyzed past ge­net­ic stud­ies to es­ti­mate
the rate of prod­uction of genes that un­der­go pos­i­tive
se­lec­tion-that is, genes that spread be­cause they are ben­e­fi­cial.
"The rate of gene­ration of pos­i­tively se­lected genes has in­creased
as much as a hun­dred­fold dur­ing the past 40,000 years," they wrote.

Among the most no­ta­ble phys­i­cal changes have been ones af­fect­ing
the size of the brain case, ac­cord­ing to Hawks and Coch­ran.

A "thing that should prob­a­bly wor­ry peo­ple is that brains have been
get­ting smaller for 20,000 to 30,000 years," said Cochran. But growth
in more ad­vanced brain ar­eas might have com­pen­sat­ed for this, he
added. He spec­u­lated that an al­most break­neck ev­o­lu­tion of
high­er fore­heads in some peo­ples may re­flect this. A study in the
Jan. 14 Brit­ish Den­tal Jour­nal found such a trend vis­i­ble in
Eng­land in just the past mil­len­ni­um, he noted, a mere eye­blink in
ev­o­lu­tionary time.

Research pub­lished in the Sept. 9, 2005 is­sue of the re­search
jour­nal Sci­ence by Lahn and col­leagues found that two genes linked to
brain size are rap­idly evolv­ing in hu­mans.

An­thro­po­l­o­gist Jef­frey Mc­Kee of Ohio State Uni­ver­si­ty said the
new find­ings of ac­ce­l­er­ated evolution bear out pre­dic­tions he
made in a 2000 book The Rid­dled Chain. Based on com­put­er mod­els, he
ar­gued that ev­o­lu­tion should speed up as a pop­u­la­tion grows. This
is be­cause pop­u­la­tion growth cre­ates more op­por­tu­ni­ties for new
mu­ta­tions; al­so, the ex­pand­ed pop­u­la­tion oc­cu­pies new
en­vi­ron­men­tal niches, which would drive ev­o­lu­tion in new
di­rec­tions.

Lahn said he's not con­vinced that the ac­cel­er­at­ed phys­i­cal
ev­o­lu­tion is tied to pop­u­la­tion growth. "It may be a long way
be­fore" an­yone can test the truth of this, he wrote.

But oth­er fac­tors could al­so ex­plain an accele­ration, ac­cord­ing
to an­thro­po­l­o­gist John Kings­ton of Em­o­ry Uni­ver­si­ty in
At­lan­ta, Ga. Ev­o­lu­tion might speed up be­cause we have changed our
own en­vi­ronment, which in turn changes the ev­o­lu­tion­ary
pres­sures. "We now con­trol our own en­vi­ronment and ecol­o­gy to some
ex­tent," he said.

For instance, if you in­vent spears, you per­haps can af­ford to be
slight­er-framed be­cause you can stand fur­ther away from wild
an­i­mals, Coch­ran said. He ar­gued that a pow­er­ful syn­er­gy
be­tween these sorts of changes and expand­ing pop­u­la­tion ex­plains
the "fant­as­tic­ally ra­pid" re­cent evo­lu­tion.

Ove­rall, the find­ings could amount to "a very big change" in
tra­di­tion­al think­ing for two rea­sons, ac­cord­ing to Mc­Kee. First,
he said, many re­search­ers had mis­tak­en­ly as­sumed pop­u­la­tion
growth would slow down ev­o­lu­tion, be­cause new mu­ta­tions would take
too long to spread through a large pop­u­la­tion.

Sec­ond, the find­ings deal a fi­nal blow to a lin­ger­ing view among
an­thro­po­l­o­gists of ev­o­lu­tion as a lad­der "with us as the
be-all-end-all," he said. That idea went out of fash­ion in the 1950s
but still per­sists "in the backs of our minds," he added.

Many of the changes found in the ge­nome or fos­sil rec­ord re­flect
me­tab­o­lic alt­er­a­tions to ad­just to ag­ri­cul­tur­al life, Cochran
said. Oth­er changes simp­ly make us weaker.

In the June 2003 is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Cur­rent
An­thro­po­l­ogy, Hel­en Leach of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ota­go, New
Zea­land wrote that skele­tons from some pop­u­la­tions in the hu­man
line­age have un­der­gone a pro­gres­sive shrink­age and weak­en­ing,
and re­duc­tion in tooth size, si­m­i­lar to changes seen in
do­mes­ti­cat­ed an­i­mals. Hu­mans seem to have do­mes­ti­cat­ed
them­selves, she ar­gued, caus­ing phys­i­cal as well as men­tal changes.

De­spite all the alte­rations, Mc­Kee said he be­lieves the no­tion of
an "o­rig­in" of mod­ern hu­mans around 200,000 years ago re­mains
use­ful. "It's just a thresh­old point" at which hu­mans take on most of
the phys­i­cal fea­tures we rec­og­nize, he re­marked, and as such,
need­n't be dis­carded. Coch­ran said it can still be ar­gued that the
key change was lang­uage; but when this ori­gi­nated re­mains far from
clear.

What­ever the imp­li­ca­tions of the recent findings, McKee added, they
high­light a ubiq­ui­tous point about ev­o­lu­tion: "every spe­cies is a
tran­si­tion­al spe­cies."
Day Brown
Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:34 pm
Guest
The Origins of Order, by Kauffman, compares the way mass species, like
the herbivores evolve compared to those which live in small isolated
gene pools. The mass washes out even positive adaptations, so the
herds have changed in 5 million years. The Hominids, since they've
moved into cities, have run into several problems. Their immune
systems are not up to it.

So- this complicates the evaluatation. Pathogens have been shown to
play a part in mental pathology during development, from in utero on.
This has been driving the rate of autism, ADD, ADHD, etc up, and
academic test scores down.

Men affected by this are not being selected for sperm donation. Those
who develop with mental gifts, regardless of what their physical
characteristics are, are being more actively propagated by the women
who're also gifted, while the airheads continue to outbreed them using
stuff muffins. The performance average has declined to the point that
the smart women, the case workers, have noticed.

At some point, they will intervene to provide more promising lines of
the Y chromosome simply as part of an effort to reduce the case
loads.

We tend to forget that the pathogens have been evolving right along
with the hominids. Its a damn moot point whether the increasing
understanding of how pathogens work will result in effective control,
or whether the sheer mass of impoverished hominids with impaired
immune systems will provide the breeding ground for an uncontrollable
plague. But unseen in the mental and physical evaluations are DNA
markers for immune response to pathogens, which is how, for instance,
some can live with HIV.

Agreed, evolution is not over, especially this kind, now going on in
Africa and other areas with high HIV rates. But by the same token,
those same areas could result in a new strain of HIV that does not
need sex to be transmitted. If that ever happens, then the only
survivors will be those who moved back to small isolated gene pools.
 
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