31. Homo antecessor

Homo antecessor (1.2 mya)

(“same” / “predecessor” or “pioneer”)

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Figure 31.1 Incomplete Homo antecessor skull from Gran Dolina, Spain. “Homo antecessor” by José-Manuel Benito is in the public domain.

SITES

Gran Dolina and Sima del Elefante, Spain

PEOPLE

Eudald Carbonell, Juan Luis Arsuaga, and J. M. Bermúdez de Castro

INTRODUCTION

Until the recent discovery of hominin fossils dating to over 1.2 mya in the Atapuerca Mountains of Spain, the earliest known fossil material from the area was no more than 800 kya. The 800 kya material was assigned the taxonomic designation of Homo antecessor, or “Pioneer Man,” as the first hominins to have ranged into Western Europe.

PHYLOGENY

Since its discovery, researchers have speculated that Homo antecessor was descended from a more derived form of H. ergaster that may have crossed the Mediterranean Sea from North Africa during a period of lowered sea levels. Now that the geological clock has been pushed back 300 kya, it is thought that they may have traveled through the Levant (i.e. the Eastern Mediterranean region). What is not known is whether the evolutionary event took place in Europe or North Africa. As far as descendant species, Homo antecessor is one contender for the ancestor of Homo heidelbergensis that in turn is thought to have given rise to neandertals and modern humans.

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Figure 31.2 Homo antecessor by Keenan Taylor.

DISCOVERY AND GEOGRAPHIC RANGE

The species was discovered by Eudald Carbonell, Juan Luis Arsuaga, and J. M. Bermúdez de Castro. The first site to yield fossil material was the Gran Dolina site (see Figure 31.4) in the Atapuerca mountain range in Spain. Dated to 900 kya, the site has yielded both H. antecessor and H. heidelbergensis material. Eighty fossils from six individuals were recovered. It is of interest that much of the fossil material is immature and exhibits cut marks that may indicate that they were victims of cannibalism.

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Figure 31.3 “Homo antecessor moves to Spain” by Keenan Taylor.

The earliest H. antecessor site is Sima del Elefante (“Pit of the Elephant”). Dated to 1.2 mya, only a handful of fossils have been recovered from the site.

In addition to other sites in Spain, tools and footprints have been found in Happisburgh, England and Ceprano, Italy (also known as Homo cepranensis, some consider it more closely related to H. heidelbergensis).

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Figure 31.4 Gran Dolina site. “Gran Dolina 2012 (Sierra de Atapuerca)” by Mario Modesto Mata is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

The 800 kya H. antecessor material was more derived than earlier erectus forms, possessing a larger brain (1,000–1,150 cc) and a more modern skull and face. They had low foreheads and possessed an occipital bun (a bun or chignon is the hairstyle wherein one winds long hair into a doughnut shape on the top or back of the head), as did neandertals (see neandertal features in Figure 31.5). It has been suggested that the purpose of that posterior protrusion is to balance the weight of the anterior portion of the skull and face. Based upon cranial anatomy, they are thought to have been capable of detecting the same range of sounds as modern humans and were possibly right-handed. They were almost as tall as modern humans at 5.5–6′ (1.6–1.8 m), with males weighing ~200 lb (90 kg).

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Figure 31.5 Neandertal cranial characteristics. “Neanderthal cranial anatomy” by Jason Potter is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.5.

Review of Derived Characteristics

  • Increased encephalization.
  • Occipital bun.
  • Tall like Turkana Boy.