Vancouver Sun

A CHILD OF WONDER

EVOLUTIONA­RY CLUES FROM SKELETON’S SPINE

- PETER HOLLEY

IF YOU HAD A TIME MACHINE AND SAW A GROUP OF THESE EARLY HUMAN RELATIVES, WHAT YOU WOULD HAVE SAID RIGHT AWAY IS, ‘WHAT IS THAT CHIMPANZEE DOING WALKING ON TWO LEGS?’ — ZERESENAY ALEMSEGED, ORGANISMAL BIOLOGY PROFESSOR

The fossilized piece of a cheek bone was spotted in a chunk of sandstone sticking out of the dirt in the scorching badlands of northeaste­rn Ethiopia.

Zeresenay Alemseged knew almost immediatel­y that he had stumbled upon something momentous.

The cheekbone led to a jaw, portions of a skull and eventually collar bones, shoulder blades, ribs and — perhaps most important — the most complete spinal column of any early human relative ever found.

Nearly 17 years later, the 3.3-million-year-old fossilized skeleton known as the “Dikika Baby” remains one of the most important discoverie­s in archeologi­cal history, one that is filling in the timeline of human evolution.

“When you put all the bones together, you have over 60 per cent of a skeleton of a child dating back to 3.3 million years ago, which is more complete than the famous australopi­thecine fossil known as ‘Lucy,’ ” said Alemseged, a 47-year-old professor of organismal biology and anatomy at the University of Chicago. “We never had the chance to recover the face of Lucy, but the Dikika child is an almost complete skeleton, which gives you an impression of how children looked 3.3 million years ago.”

The fossil, also called “Selam” — “peace” in the Ethiopian Amharic language — has revealed numerous insights into our early human relatives. But Alemseged said one of the most startling findings comes from the toddler’s spine, which had an adaptation for walking upright that had not been seen in such an old skeleton.

The result, he said, is a creature whose upper body was ape-like, but whose pelvis, legs and feet had familiar, human-like adaptation­s.

“If you had a time machine and saw a group of these early human relatives, what you would have said right away is, ‘What is that chimpanzee doing walking on two legs?’ ” Alemseged said.

The findings, published this week in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, show for the first time the spinal column was human-like in its numbering and segmentati­on. Though scientists know that even older species were bipedal, researcher­s said Selam’s fossilized vertebrae is the only hard evidence of bipedal adaptation­s in an ancient hominid spine.

“Yes, there were other bipedal species before, but what is making this unique is the preservati­on of the spine, which simply is unpreceden­ted,” Alemseged said. “Not only is it exquisitel­y preserved, but it also tells us that the human-type of segmentati­on emerged at least 3.3 million years ago. Could there have been other species with a similar structure, yes, but we don’t know for sure.”

Human beings share many of the same spinal structures as other primates, but the human spine — which has more vertebrae in the lower back, for example — is adapted for efficient upright motion, such as walking and running on two feet.

Among the larger questions researcher­s such as Alemseged are trying to answer include: When did our ancestors evolve the ability to be bipedal? When did we become more bipedal than arboreal, or tree-dwelling? And when did our ancestors abandon an arboreal lifestyle to become the runners and walkers that eventually populated Africa and then the world?

One of the significan­t barriers to answering those questions is that complete sets of vertebrae are rarely preserved in the fossil record.

Unpacking the intricacie­s of Selam’s spinal structure would not have been possible without the assistance of cutting-edge technology, researcher­s said.

After 13 years of using dental tools to painstakin­gly remove portions of the fossil from sandstone — which risked destroying the fossil — Alemseged packed up Selam in his suitcase and took the fossil from Ethiopia to the European Synchrotro­n Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France, in 2010. Alemseged and the research team spent nearly two weeks there using high-resolution imaging technology to visualize the bones. The results, said Alemseged, “were mind-blowing.”

The scans revealed that the child possessed the thoracic-to-lumbar joint transition found in other fossil human relatives, but they also showed that Selam had a smaller number of vertebrae and ribs than most apes have.

For researcher­s, the skeleton is a window into the transition between rib-bearing vertebrae and lower back vertebrae, which allowed our early human ancestors to extend at the waist and begin moving upright., eventually becoming highly efficient walkers and runners.

Though he has been studying Selam for nearly two decades, Alemseged thinks the fossil has more secrets to share with the modern world.

“I don’t think she will stop surprising us as the analysis continues,” he said. “Science and tech is evolving so much that I’m sure in a few years we’ll be able to extract even more informatio­n that we’re not able to extract today.”

 ?? ZERESENAY ALEMSEGED, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ?? A newly revealed spinal column and vertebrae, left, of Selam, a 3.3 million-year-old Australopi­thecus afarensis fossil discovered by Zeresenay Alemseged in 2000. At right is Selam’s skull after being re-created by researcher­s.
ZERESENAY ALEMSEGED, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO A newly revealed spinal column and vertebrae, left, of Selam, a 3.3 million-year-old Australopi­thecus afarensis fossil discovered by Zeresenay Alemseged in 2000. At right is Selam’s skull after being re-created by researcher­s.
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