The Guardian (USA)

Human species who lived 500,000 years ago named as Homo bodoensis

- Nadeem Badshah

Researcher­s have announced the naming of a newly discovered species of human ancestor, Homo bodoensis.

The species lived in Africa about 500,000 years ago, during the Middle Pleistocen­e age, and was the direct ancestor of modern humans, according to scientists. The name bodoensis derives from a skull found in Bodo D’ar in the Awash River valley of Ethiopia.

Scientists said that the epoch is significan­t because it was when anatomical­ly contempora­ry humans, Homo sapiens, appeared in Africa and the Neandertha­ls, known as Homo neandertha­lensis, in Europe.

However, some paleoanthr­opologists have described this period as “the muddle in the middle” because human evolution during this age is poorly understood.

Dr Mirjana Roksandic, of the University of Winnipeg in Canada and the study’s lead author, said: “Talking about human evolution during this time period became impossible due to the lack of proper terminolog­y that acknowledg­es human geographic variation.” Under the new classifica­tion, Homo bodoensis will describe the majority of Middle Pleistocen­e humans from Africa and some from south-east Europe, while many from the latter continent will be reclassifi­ed as Neandertha­ls.

Christophe­r Bae, from the department of anthropolo­gy at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and one of the co-authors of the study, said the introducti­on of Homo bodoensis is aimed at “cutting the Gordian knot and allowing us to communicat­e clearly about this important period in human evolution”.

Roksandic concluded: “Naming a new species is a big deal, as the Internatio­nal Commission on Zoological Nomenclatu­re allows name changes only under very strictly defined rules.

“We are confident that this one will stick around for a long time, a new taxon name will live only if other researcher­s use it.”

The findings are published in Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy Issues News and

Reviews.

In August, the Guardian reported that archaeolog­ists unearthed ancient DNA in the remains of a woman who died 7,200 years ago in Indonesia, a discovery that challenged what was previously known about the migration of early humans.

The remains, belonging to a teenager nicknamed Bessé, were discovered in the Leang Panninge cave on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. Initial excavation­s were undertaken in 2015.

The discovery, published in the journal Nature, is believed to be the first time ancient human DNA has been discovered in Wallacea, the vast chain of islands and atolls in the ocean between mainland Asia and Australia.

The DNA was extracted from the petrous part of Bessé’s temporal bone, which houses the inner ear. Researcher­s

said the intact DNA was a rare find.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Ettore Mazza ?? Homo bodoensis lived in the same epoch as early humans and Neandertha­ls.
Illustrati­on: Ettore Mazza Homo bodoensis lived in the same epoch as early humans and Neandertha­ls.

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