Tanzania footprints offer clues on origin of human upright walking
Researchers said on Wednesday a thorough new examination of the fossil footprints has shown that they were made not by a bear, as once believed, but by a hominin.
By REUTERS, published:
DECEMBER 1, 2021
Footprints in the sand (photo credit: REUTERS FILE PHOTOS)
Five fossil footprints left in volcanic ash 3.66 million years ago in Tanzania
are giving scientists new insight on a landmark in human evolution -
upright walking - while showing that its origins are more complicated
than previously known.
Researchers
said on Wednesday a thorough new examination of the tracks, nearly half
a century after their initial discovery, has shown that they were made
not by a bear, as once believed, but by a hominin - in other words, a
species in the human lineage - and possibly a previously unknown one.
They display a curious gait, adding to the mystery.
Bipedalism - walking on two feet - is a hallmark of humankind, but
scientists are still putting together the puzzle pieces on how and when
it began.
The
trackway was found in 1976 at a site called Laetoli - a stark landscape
northwest of the Ngorongoro Crater in northern Tanzania - about a mile
(1.6 km) from two sets of fossil footprints found two years later. Those
found in 1978 have been attributed to Australopithecus afarensis, a hominin exemplified by the famous skeleton discovered in Ethiopia dubbed 'Lucy.'
The study determined that the various Laetoli tracks - made within days, hours or possibly minutes of one another in the same ash layer - were created by two different hominin species.
Paleoanthropologist
Ellie McNutt of Ohio University's Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature, noted that the Laetoli trackways represent the oldest unequivocal evidence of bipedal locomotion in the human fossil record.
"There
were at least two hominins walking in different ways on differently
shaped feet at this time in our evolutionary history, showing that the
acquisition of human-like walking was less linear than many imagine,"
said Dartmouth College paleoanthropologist and study co-author Jeremy
DeSilva. "In other words, throughout our history, there were different
evolutionary experiments in how to be a biped."
The footprints found in 1976 and re-excavated in 2019 bore
different traits than those found in 1978, in particular a gait called
cross-stepping.
"The
trackway consists of five consecutive bipedal footprints. But the left
foot is crossing over the right, and vice versa. We aren't sure what
this means yet," DeSilva said.
"Cross-stepping sometimes occurs in humans when we are walking on
uneven ground. Perhaps that explains this odd gait. Or perhaps just this
individual hominin walked in a peculiar manner. Or maybe an unknown
species of hominin was adapted to walk in this way," DeSilva added.
Based
on the footprints, the researchers estimate that the individual that
made them was only a bit taller than 3 feet (1 meter), walked with a
prominent heel strike, and had a big toe that stuck out to the side
slightly, though not as much as in a chimpanzee.
DeSilva
said scientists can only speculate about other aspects of this
hominin's appearance and behavior and whether it was one already
identified - such as Kenyanthropus platyops or Australopithecus deyiremeda - or a previously unknown one.
The
human lineage diverged from the chimpanzee lineage about 6 million to 7
million years ago. A key moment came when our ancestors adopted erect
walking on two feet, perhaps adapting to life on the African savanna.
Bipedalism
required anatomical changes, particularly in the feet, legs, hips and
spine, that evolved long before our species, Homo sapiens, appeared more
than 300,000 years ago.
The Laetoli site is a grassland, with acacia trees dotting the
landscape and giraffes and zebras plentiful.
When the footprints were
made, it was a hazardous neighborhood for a little hominin, with
ancestors of modern hyenas, lions, and leopards, as well as now-extinct
saber-toothed cats, on the prowl.
"Ancestors
of a lot of the same animals that live there now lived at Laetoli
millions of years ago including, of course, humans," DeSilva said.
Mysterious footprints in the sand ? That was the wife's relatives, always making a mess, I told them to wipe their dirty feet clean before entering our cave for Sunday brunch of barbecued hyena ribs!
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