T
Taudan
Guest
Ich wollte das eigentlich schon früher posten aber habe es immer wieder vergessen.
Ich hoffe dass es nicht problematisch ist wenn es auf englisch ist.
[h=1]Does this skull rewrite the history of mankind? 1.8 million-year-old remains suggest all human ancestors belonged to the SAME species but just looked different[/h]
The discovery of a complete 1.8 million-years-old skull has rewritten the story of how modern man evolved from our early ancestors in Africa, according to Swiss scientists.
A skull found in Georgia from an ancient human ancestor, known as Skull 5, implies that all Homo species were once one.
Research suggests that the earliest members of the Homo genus, including Homo habilis, Homo rudolfensis and Homo erectus belonged to the same species and simply looked different to each other, shaking up the classification system for early human ancestors.
It is popularly thought that different characteristics among the Homo fossils showed they were distinct, different species but this research casts this theory into doubt.
Scientists from the Anthropological Institute and Museum in Zurich say Skull 5 indicates that rather than several ecologically specialised Homo species, a single Homo species that was able to cope with a variety of ecosystems, emerged from Africa some two million years ago.
Does this skull rewrite the history of mankind? 1.8 million-year-old remains suggest all human ancestors belonged to the SAME species but just looked different | Mail Online
Ich hoffe dass es nicht problematisch ist wenn es auf englisch ist.
[h=1]Does this skull rewrite the history of mankind? 1.8 million-year-old remains suggest all human ancestors belonged to the SAME species but just looked different[/h]
The discovery of a complete 1.8 million-years-old skull has rewritten the story of how modern man evolved from our early ancestors in Africa, according to Swiss scientists.
A skull found in Georgia from an ancient human ancestor, known as Skull 5, implies that all Homo species were once one.
Research suggests that the earliest members of the Homo genus, including Homo habilis, Homo rudolfensis and Homo erectus belonged to the same species and simply looked different to each other, shaking up the classification system for early human ancestors.
It is popularly thought that different characteristics among the Homo fossils showed they were distinct, different species but this research casts this theory into doubt.
Scientists from the Anthropological Institute and Museum in Zurich say Skull 5 indicates that rather than several ecologically specialised Homo species, a single Homo species that was able to cope with a variety of ecosystems, emerged from Africa some two million years ago.
Does this skull rewrite the history of mankind? 1.8 million-year-old remains suggest all human ancestors belonged to the SAME species but just looked different | Mail Online