3D RECONSTRUCTION AND ANIMATION OF Homo ergaster pair |
Homo ergaster:
3D RECONSTRUCTION OF Homo ergaster pair |
Homo ergaster was the first of our ancestors to look more
like modern humans. These people were generally tall and slender and may also
have been relatively hairless. Not everyone accepts this species name, some
still prefer to use the term African Homo erectus.
Background to
discovery
Age
The core group within this species lived between 1.5 and
1.9 million years ago although some classifications include additional
individuals that extends their range to between about 700,000 and 2 million
years ago.Important fossil discoveries
Homo ergaster was first proposed as a new species in 1975
after scientists re-examined a fossil jaw previously identified as Homo
habilis. Colin Groves and Vratislav Mazák noticed some unique features about
this jaw that made it different to our other human ancestors. These same
features were later recognised in a group of fossils that had initially been
thought to be early forms of Homo erectus from Africa. All these fossils have
now been reclassified as Homo ergaster. New fossil discoveries have since been
made and this species is now represented by fossils from males and females as
well as adults and juveniles.
Lake Turkana Specimen |
Important specimens
‘Turkana Boy’ KNM-WT 15000 – skeleton discovered in 1984
by Kamoya Kimeu in Nariokotome, West Turkana, Kenya. The Turkana Boy or
‘Nariokotome Boy’ as he is sometimes called, lived about 1.5 million years ago.
He was about 8 to 10 years of age when he died but was already 1.6 metres tall
and may have reached 1.85 metres as an adult. Almost 90% of his skeleton was
recovered and has provided valuable information on this species’ body size,
proportions and development. The Turkana Boy had a tall, slender body adapted
for striding out across the extensive savannah plains. He also had a more
human-like face with a nose that projected outwards and a larger braincase.
SK 847 – a partial skull discovered in 1969 in
Swartkrans, South Africa by Ronald Clark. This skull was found in a cave with
many fossils from another species, Paranthropus robustus. Stone tools and burned
bones were also found at this site. The tool maker was probably Homo ergaster.
Fire may have been used here about 1.5 million years ago by Homo ergaster,
although the burned bones may have resulted from a natural fire rather than
from a controlled man-made fire.
KNM-ER 3733 – skull discovered in 1975 by Bernard Ngeneo
and Richard Leakey in Koobi Fora, East Turkana, Kenya. This is the skull of an
adult female. Females had less robust features compared with males such as
‘Turkana Boy’.
KNM-ER 992 – a lower jaw discovered in 1971 by Bernard
Ngeneo in Koobi Fora, East Turkana, Kenya. This lower jaw is the ‘type
specimen’ or official representative of this species. It was first classified
as Homo habilis, but was reclassified as Homo ergaster in 1975 because it
showed advanced features such as a lightly built jaw and relatively small
premolar and molar teeth.
KNM-ER 42700 - A 1.5-million-year-old skull of a young
adult discovered in Ileret in Kenya in 2000 (described in 2007). The skull has
a very small brain of about 691cc, the smallest for any Homo ergaster. This
indicates that this species came in a variety of sizes, with males being much
larger than females, which was unexpected for this species. It also shows
features that had previously only been found in Asian Homo erectus, such as the
ridge on the frontal and parietal skull bones. This mix of traits blurs the
distinction between Asian Homo erectus and African Homo ergaster and has caused
some experts to rethink whether these should be separate species.
BSN49/P27 – a female pelvis from Gona, Afar in Ethiopia,
dated to 1.8 million years old. The size of this pelvis suggest the female was
quite short at only about 130cm in height, much smaller than has been estimated
for females prior to this discovery. The size and shape also indicate the
female could have given birth to a young with a brain 30-50% the size of an
adult’s. This suggests that the growth rate of the brain in the womb was
similar to that of a modern human but slowed down in the first few years of
life to a rate intermediate between modern humans and living chimpanzees.
Various fossils found in Eurasia at Dmanisi in the
Republic of Georgia may belong to Homo ergaster. These Dmanisi fossils are
significant because they currently represent the earliest evidence for the
emergence of early humans from Africa into Eurasia 1.75 million years ago. Key
specimens include: Skull D2700 (discovered in 2001) with a brain size of 600
cc; Skull D2280 (discovered in 1999) with a brain szie of 780 cc and features similar
to Homo ergaster specimens KNM-WT 15000 and KNM-ER 3733; and Skull D2282
(discovered in 1999) with a brain size of about 650 cc and features similar to
KNM-WT 15000 and KNM-ER 3733.
Fossil footprints from Ileret, Kenya, dated to 1.5
million years ago. These are the oldest known evidence of an essentially modern
human-like foot anatomy and differ from the Laetoli footprints left by
australopithecines 3.6 million years ago. The size and shape suggest that they
were made by Homo ergaster, which also makes them the oldest surviving
footprints made by a human species.
What the name means
Homo, is a Latin word meaning ‘human’ or ‘man’. It is the
same genus or group name as the one given to modern humans, which indicates the
close relationship between this species and our own.
The word ergaster is based on a Greek word meaning
‘work’, so the name Homo ergaster means ‘workman’. This name was used because
large stone tools were found near some of its fossils.
Distribution
Fossils of this species have been found in Africa and
Eurasia. Important sites include regions around Lake Turkana and Lake Victoria,
Koobi Fora, Nariokotome, Olorgesailie, Swartkrans and Dmanisi, Georgia.
Relationships with other species
Some people do not recognise Homo ergaster as a species and
instead classify these fossils as Homo erectus. Those who do accept Homo
ergaster consider this species to be the common ancestor of two groups of
humans that took different evolutionary paths. One of these groups was Homo
erectus, the other group ultimately became our own species Homo sapiens.
Some fossils including the ‘type specimen’ (a jaw known
as KNM-ER 992) were formerly classified as Homo habilis.
Finds from Dmanisi in Georgia are currently attributed by
most scientists to this species, although new finds led to the suggestion in
2002 that these belong in a new species, Homo georgicus. However, this is not
widely accepted.
More recently, skull KNM-ER 42700, dating to 1.5 million
years old and discovered in Ileret in Kenya in 2000 (but described in 2007),
blurs the distinction between Asian Homo erectus and African Homo ergaster. It
shows features that had previously only been found in Asian Homo erectus
specimens, such as the ridge on the frontal and parietal skull bones. This mix
of traits caused some experts to rethink the whether these should be separate
species.
Key physical
features
This species’ tall, long-legged body, with a flatter
face, a projecting nose and a somewhat expanded brain was well along the
evolutionary path leading to modern humans but it still possessed a number of
intermediate features.
Body size and shape
the body is usually considered to be tall and slender
with long legs which may have been an adaptation to maximise cooling of the
body in a hot, dry environment. However, a pelvis found in 2000 suggests that
females at least were broad-hipped and short.
females grew to about 160 centimetres in height whereas
males reached about 180 centimetres in height.
the body may have been relatively hairless as a way of
improving body cooling by sweating.
ribcage was like that of modern humans in being
barrel-shaped rather than cone-shaped as in earlier species. Along with changes
to the shoulders, chest and waist, this new body shape improved the body’s
balance and made it possible to run.
3D RECONSTRUCTION OF Homo ergaster pair
Brain
average brain size was approximately 860 cubic
centimetres and made up about 1.6% of their body weight
Skull
had developed a more human-like shape including a higher,
more domed cranium or braincase. Unlike modern humans, the cranium had a
moderate post-orbital constriction (indents behind the eye sockets). This
feature is linked to brain size. As our ancestors’ brains expanded, their
skulls became fuller and more rounded with increasingly smaller post-orbital
constrictions.
face projected outward but to a smaller degree than in
earlier ancestors
distinct double-arched brow ridge lay above the eyes and
a relatively distinct groove was located between the brow ridge and forehead
nose was human-like for the first time. It now projected
outward whereas earlier species had flat noses
Jaws and teeth
jaw was shorter and more lightly built than those of
earlier species, resulting in a flatter, shorter face like earlier species, the
front of the lower jaw sloped backward and did not form a pointed chin like
that of modern humans
arrangement of the teeth within the jaws was intermediate
between that of apes and modern humans in that the side rows of teeth were much
further apart at the back of the jaw than at the front canine teeth were modern
in form, being short and blunt like those of modern humans premolar and molar
teeth were smaller and more human-like than those of earlier species.
3D RECONSTRUCTION OF Homo ergaster pair
Backbone and pelvis
pelvis was shaped like that of a modern human and was
relatively narrow compared with species such as Australopithecus afarensis.This
probably allowed more efficient movement on two legs.
a female pelvis specimen indicates that at least some
females had quite broad-hipped bodies rather than the tall narrow body
suggested by the Turkana Boy skeleton. This pelvis shares some features with
A.afarensis.
body was vertically aligned above the pelvis.
vertebrae from the neck region of the backbone show that
the spinal cord was thinner than in modern humans. This may indicate that this
species had limited speech abilities due to the lack of nerves needed for the
complex control of breathing while speaking.
Limbs
unlike earlier species, the legs were much longer than
the arms, so the limb proportions were similar to those of modern humans
tree climbing adaptations of earlier species had been
lost and had given way to a long-legged striding walk that was an efficient way
to move about and made it easier to travel longer distances
an ability to run on two legs is suggested by a variety
of limb features as well as changes to the shoulders, chest and waist that
enabled the body to stay balanced during prolonged running
Lifestyle
Culture and
technology
The technology of Homo ergaster became more advanced with
the production of new kinds of stone tools. Other aspects of their behaviour
also showed some significant changes, including the possible use of fire and
increased levels of physical activity.
Tools
Large stone tools including hand axes, cleavers and picks
(classified as Mode 2 technology) were manufactured. To make these tools, large
stone flakes were produced and these were then shaped on two sides to produce
sharp edges. This improved technology created more durable tools that
maintained their sharpness longer than earlier types of tools. Microscopic
examination has shown their tools were mainly used on meat, bone, animal hides
and wood.
Mode 2 technology includes straight-edged cleavers,
pointed picks and hand axes. These tools are often called Acheulean stone tools
after St Acheul in France where similar tools were first discovered during the
1800s. These tools were suitable for heavy duty work including processing bones
for marrow, butchering large mammals and woodworking. This new technology was
developed by Homo ergaster in Africa and was an improvement on the very simple
stone choppers (Mode 1 technology) that earlier ancestors such as Homo habilis
had been using for about one million years. Later, Homo heidelbergensis
continued to use this technology in Africa and they also took this technology
with them when they spread into Eurasia. One of the richest Acheulean stone
tool sites in Africa is Olorgesailie, Kenya. Dating shows these tools were made
over 700,000 years ago and they may even be up to 900,000 years old.
Fire
Fire may have been used as long as 1.5 million years ago
for cooking and warmth but whether this was a controlled use of fire is not
certain. Charcoal, burnt earth, and charred bones found associated with Homo
ergaster fossils may have resulted from naturally occurring fires rather than
from intentionally lit and controlled fires.
Recent reports (Current Anthropology vol 52, 4, August
2011) of discoveries in Wonderwerk Cave, South Africa, suggest controlled use
of fire may have been occuring by 1.7 million years ago. Stratified deposits
contain burnt stones, charred-calcined bones and traces of ash that indicate
repeated burning events. The discoverers conclude that the fire-makers, most
likely Homo ergaster, regularly gathered around the fire to prepare and cook
food and also for social reasons.
Social behaviour
None of the Homo ergaster skeletons that have been found
so far were deliberately buried. There is evidence however, that they did care
for living members of their group who were sick or injured, but they did not
seem to be concerned with their welfare after death.
It is probable that these people lived in social groups
based on family bonds. A comparison with groups of primates living today
suggests that these humans were moving away from a dominant-male social
structure. Their developmental rates show that they took longer to mature to
adulthood than modern apes, but not as long as modern humans. This feature
suggests that Homo ergaster had an extended childhood period in which to
complete development to maturity.
Environment and
diet
About 1.8 million years ago, the climate over most of
Africa became drier and more seasonal with extensive savannahs. Homo ergaster
was the first human species to take advantage of these more arid and open
environments.
This species’ narrower pelvis and rib cage suggests that
they had a smaller gut than earlier species such as Australopithecus afarensis.
The development of a smaller gut and a bigger brain required more nourishing
food and this suggests that they may have included more meat in their diets.
In the dry savannah environment, plant tubers would
probably have been an important part of the diet. These tough vegetables may
have been processed using their improved technology as their smaller molar
teeth imply that they ate foods that required less chewing.
Colin Groves:
Colin Peter Groves (24 June 1942 – 30 November 2017) was
a British-Australian biologist and anthropologist. Groves was Professor of
Biological Anthropology at the Australian National University in Canberra,
Australia.
Education
Born in England, Groves completed a Bachelor of Science
at University College London in 1963, and a Doctor of Philosophy at the Royal
Free Hospital School of Medicine in 1966. From 1966 to 1973, he was a
postdoctoral researcher and teaching fellow at the University of California,
Berkeley, Queen Elizabeth College and the University of Cambridge.
Career
Groves emigrated to Australia in 1973 and joined the
Australian National University, where he was promoted to full professor in 2000
and remained emeritus professor until his death.
Along with the
Czech biologist Professor Vratislav Mazák, Groves was the describer of Homo
ergaster.Groves also wrote Primate
Taxonomy published by the Smithsonian Institution Press in 2001, and Ungulate
Taxonomy, co-authored by Peter Grubb (2011, Johns Hopkins Press).
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