The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Europe, not Africa, may have seen origin of man

New discoverie­s point to Mediterran­ean split from apes

- BY JOHN VON RADOWITZ

The birthplace of the human race may be Mediterran­ean Europe and not Africa, a controvers­ial new discovery suggests.

Scientists base the claim on an analysis of two very ancient fossils, a tooth and lower jawbone, unearthed in Bulgaria and Greece.

Evidence indicates that the ape-like creature they belonged to was the oldest pre-human known, dating back as far as 7.2million years.

Graecopith­ecus freybergi is said to be several hundred thousand years older than the most ancient potential human ancestor discovered in Africa, Sahelanthr­opus, from Chad.

The implicatio­n is that humans split from their ape cousins not in Africa, as has been widely assumed, but Europe.

Phd student Jochen Fuss, a member of the internatio­nal research team from the University of Tubingen in Germany, said: “We were surprised by our results, as pre-humans were previously known only from sub-Saharan Africa.”

For more than 40 years, the “cradle of humanity” has been firmly located in East Africa, where hundreds of fossils of humans and pre-humans were discovered in the 1960s and 1970s.

The Graecopith­ecus fossils, described in the journal Public Library of Science ONE, were found to have dental traits seen in modern humans, early humans and pre-humans, but not great apes.

Computer tomography scans were used to visualise the internal structure of the tooth and jawbone.

Lead researcher Professor Madelaine Bohme, also from the University of Tubingen, said: “While great apes typically have two or three separate and diverging roots, the roots of Graecopith­ecus converge and are partially fused – a feature that is characteri­stic of modern humans, early humans and several pre-humans including Ardipithec­us and Australopi­thecus.”

The lower jaw, nicknamed “El Graeco” by the scientists, had additional dental features suggesting a pre-human lineage.

Both the Greek and Bulgarian fossils were roughly 7.2million years old, dating them to a time when the Mediterran­ean region was covered in Africa-like savannah grassland and home to giraffes and rhinos.

“Base the claim on an analysis of two very ancient fossils”

 ??  ?? ANCIENT: A 7.24million-year-old upper premolar tooth, above, found in Bulgaria and jawbone, found in Greece, are shedding new light on human evolution
ANCIENT: A 7.24million-year-old upper premolar tooth, above, found in Bulgaria and jawbone, found in Greece, are shedding new light on human evolution

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