1.2 million years old Homo Erectus
Woman's
 Pelvis Found in Ethiopia

    November 14, 2008

Homo Erectus Women Had Big-Brained Babies, New Fossil Suggests

    The fossilized pelvis of a Homo erectus
    woman who lived 1.2 million years ago on
    the banks of an Ethiopian river has been
    discovered, and while researchers say it
    casts new light on human evolution, some
    of their conclusions are challenging
    previous theories about these early human
    ancestors. The pelvis reveals a short, squat
    woman who wasn’t built for long-distance
    running, but also a woman with a wide birth
    canal to accommodate big-brained infants.

Study coauthor Scott Simpson says the pelvis’s wide birth canal indicates that
hominds’ increasing brain size was a driving factor in human evolution. Getting
through the birth canal is “the most gymnastic thing we ever do,” he says. To
accommodate big-brained babies, humans must have developed larger and wider
birth canals over time, but with few pelvic fossils, researchers had little idea when
these changes began. The Busidima pelvis shows that a wide birth canal was
already in place 1.2 million years ago [
New Scientist].

The findings, published in Science [subscription required], seems to contradict an
earlier theory on the appearance of these hominids: H. erectus females were
assumed to have had narrow hips and relatively small birth canals that could allow
the passage of only small-brained infants. But such theories were largely based
on measurements of the pelvis of “Turkana Boy,” a 1.5-million-year-old juvenile
male H. erectus fossil discovered in Kenya in 1984 [
National Geographic News].
Simpson says it was difficult to make broad assumptions based on the Turkana
Boy; the fossil was very fragmented, he says, and men and women can have very
different anatomical features.

Researchers say the newly discovered pelvis belonged to a woman in her 20s
who stood about 4 feet 5 inches tall. This also challenges previous theories, as
the Turkana Boy was thought to be over 6 feet tall, with a long and lean frame well
suited for distance running. Anthropologist Daniel Lieberman says that earlier find
led to the theory that long-distance running enabled H. erectus to hunt effectively
without spearheads and to obtain enough meat to support the evolution of
increasingly large brains. “This pelvis is a nice addition to the fossil record, but it
raises more questions than it answers” [Science News], says Lieberman. With
such divergent views on the table, Lieberman and some other experts say
Simpson needs more evidence to support his theories.
Source

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