Verso few researchers have generally opposed the view that H

Verso few researchers have generally opposed the view that H

erectus was the direct ancestor of later species, including Homo sapiens. Louis Leakey argued energetically that H. erectus populations, particularly in Africa, overlap in time with more advanced Homo sapiens and therefore cannot be ancestral onesto the latter. Some support for Leakey’s point of view has ad esempio from analysis of anatomic characteristics exhibited by the fossils. By emphasizing verso distinction between “primitive” and “derived” traits durante the reconstruction of relationships between species, several paleontologists have attempted to esibizione that H. erectus does not make a suitable morphological ancestor for Homo sapiens. Because the braincase is long, low, and thick-walled and presents verso strong browridge, they claim that H. erectus shows derived (or specialized) characteristics not shared with more modern humans. At the same time, it is noted, Homo sapiens does share some features, including per rounded, lightly built cranium, with earlier hominins such as H. habilis. For these reasons, some paleontologists (including Leakey) consider the more slender, or “magro,” H. habilis and H. rudolfensis to be more closely related esatto Homo sapiens than is H. erectus. These findings are not widely accepted, however. Instead, studies of size sopra human evolution indicate that representatives of Homo can be grouped into verso reasonable ancestor-to-descendant sequence showing increases con body size. Despite having a heavier, more flattened braincase, H. erectus, most particularly the African representatives of the species sometimes called H. ergaster, is not out of place mediante this sequence.

If this much is agreed, there is still uncertainty as puro how and where H. erectus eventually gave rise preciso Homo sapiens. This is verso major question con the study of human evolution and one that resists resolution even when hominin fossils from throughout the Old World are surveyed per detail. Several general hypotheses have been advanced, but there is still mai firm consensus regarding models of gradual change as opposed preciso scenarios of rapid evolution con which change sopra one region is followed by migration of the new populations into other areas.

Theories of gradual change

A traditional view held by some paleontologists is that verso species may be transformed gradually into verso succeeding species. Such successive species per the evolutionary sequence are called chronospecies. The boundaries between chronospecies are almost impossible to determine by means of any objective anatomic or functional criteria; thus, all that is left is the guesswork of drawing per boundary at a moment durante time. Such verso chronological boundary may have onesto be drawn arbitrarily between the last survivors of H. erectus and the earliest members of a succeeding species (anche.g., Homo sapiens). The problem of defining the limits of chronospecies is not peculiar esatto H. erectus; it is one of the most vexing questions con paleontology.

Such gradual change with continuity between successive forms has been postulated particularly for North Africa, where H. erectus at Tighenif is seen as ancestral puro later populations at Rabat, Temara, Jebel Irhoud, and elsewhere. Gradualism has also been postulated for Southeast Oriente, where H. erectus at Sangiran may have progressed toward populations è fatflirt gratis such as those at Ngandong (Solo) and at Kow Swamp per Australia. Some researchers have suggested that similar developments could have occurred durante other parts of the world.

The supposed interrelation of cultural achievement and the shape and size of teeth, jaws, and brain is a theorized state of affairs with which some paleoanthropologists disagree. Throughout the human fossil record there are examples of dissociation between skull shape and size on the one hand and cultural achievement on the other. For example, verso smaller-brained H. erectus di nuovo fire, but much bigger-brained people sopra other regions of the world living later mediante time have left no evidence that they knew how puro handle it. Gradualism is at the core of the so-called “ multiregional” hypothesis (see human evolution), sopra which it is theorized that H. erectus evolved into Homo sapiens not once but several times as each subspecies of H. erectus, living per its own territory, passed some postulated critical threshold. This theory depends on accepting per supposed erectus-sapiens threshold as correct. It is opposed by supporters of the “ out of Africa” hypothesis, who find the threshold concept at variance with the modern genetic theory of evolutionary change.

Theories of punctuated change

Per gradual transition from H. erectus preciso Homo sapiens is one interpretation of the fossil superiorita, but the evidence also can be read differently. Many researchers have che puro accept what can be termed per punctuated view of human evolution. This view suggests that species such as H. erectus may have exhibited little or mai morphological change over long periods of time (evolutionary stasis) and that the transition from one species esatto a descendant form may have occurred relatively rapidly and per per restricted geographic dipartimento rather than on per worldwide basis. Whether any Homo species, including our own, evolved gradually or rapidly has not been settled.

The continuation of such arguments underlines the need for more fossils sicuro establish the range of physical variation of H. erectus and also for more discoveries mediante good archaeological contexts onesto permit more precise dating. Additions onesto these two bodies of momento may settle remaining questions and bring the problems surrounding the evolution of H. erectus nearer onesto resolution.

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