Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Morphological affinities of Homo naledi with other Plio-Pleistocene hominins: a phenetic approach

ABSTRACT

Recent fossil material found in Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa, was initially described as a new species of genus Homo, namely Homo naledi. The original study of this new material has pointed to a close proximity with Homo erectus. More recent investigations have, to some extent, confirmed this assignment. Here we present a phenetic analysis based on dentocranial metric variables through Principal Components Analysis and Cluster Analysis based on these fossils and other Plio-Pleistocene hominins. Our results concur that the Dinaledi fossil hominins pertain to genus Homo. However, in our case, their nearest neighbors are Homo habilis and Australopithecus sediba. We suggest that Homo naledi is in fact a South African version of Homo habilis, and not a new species. This can also be applied to Australopithecus sediba.

Key words:
cranio-dental traits; human evolution; human origins; multivariate analysis

INTRODUCTION

Lee Berger and other 46 co-authors (Berger et al. 2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.) presented new important findings of fossil hominins in South Africa. Differently from other discoveries in East and South Africa, skeletal remains of approximately 15 individuals were found at the same locus of a cave chamber denominated by the authors as Dinaledi. Valuable information about the cranial and dental morphology of these Plio-Pleistocene specimens was obtained from approximately five skulls. The original metric data obtained for these individuals were presented by Lee Berger and his associates in Table 1 of their publication (Berger et al. 2015). The same table presents craniometric data of several other Plio-Pleistocene hominins. However important, this new material presents a great limitation: no reliable chronology was obtained for the remains found in Dinaledi.

TABLE 1
Anatomical traits of H. naledi as compared to other Plio-Pleistocene hominins as expressed by Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.).

In spite of this limitation Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.) suggested several phylogenetic scenarios to accommodate the new findings. The most important information used by the authors to compare the Dinaledi findings with other “contemporary” hominins is summarized in Table 1. A rapid inspection of this table reveals a greater similarity between the Dinadeli findings with Homo erectus than with Australopitecines and early Homo (habilis and rudolfensis).

Taking into account the information summarized in Table I, Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.) suggested that the Dinadeli specimens could be classified as a new species: Homo naledi. Another suggestion presented by the original authors was that the best way to accommodate this new species in the early human phylogenetic history is to allocate it as the ancestor or a sister group of H. erectus, assuming that the material is dated around 2.0 mya (Berger et al. 2015). Ever since the original publication by Berger and associates, the phylogenetic position and the age of Homo naledi has been largely debated.

Thackeray (2015THACKERAY JF. 2015. Estimating the age and affinities of Homo naledi. S Afr J Sci 111: 11-12.), for instance, suggested that the Dinaledi fossil hominins appear to be mostly similar to early Homo, especially to Homo habilis. Using a least squares linear regression encompassing the 12 hominin species presented by Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.), the author estimated that the age of the Dinaledi material would be around 2.0 mya.

Laird et al. (2016LAIRD MF, SCHOROEDER L, GARVIN HM, SCOTT JE, DEMBO M, RADOVČIĆ D, MUSIVA CM, ACKERMANN RR AND SCHMID P. 2016. The skull of Homo naledi. J Hum Evol 104: 100-123.) expanded the studied material included in the original publication (restricted to complete and semi-complete skulls D1 to D5) adding to their study the fragmented bones. They used 100 linear measurements and ratios encompassing cranial form, facial morphology, and mandibular anatomy. Their main conclusions can be summarized as follows: 1. It is feasible to place the new specimens from South Africa within the genus Homo; 2. The skulls from Dinaledi chamber may be excluded from any existing taxa; 3. There are sufficient differences to warrant separation of Homo naledi and Homo erectus. Another important finding of Laird et al. (2016) was that the whole material from Dinaledi chamber is very homogenous, pointing to a single taxon.

Dembo et al. (2016DEMBO M ET AL. 2016. The evolutionary relationships and age of Homo naledi: An assessment using Bayesian phylogenetic methods. J Hum Evol 97: 17-26.) used a large supermatrix of cranial traits followed by quantitative analyses based on Bayesian techniques. The analyses performed by them supported the hypothesis that Homonaledi forms a clade with other Homo species and with Australopithecus sediba. The assignment of Homo naledi to genus Homo was confirmed, but not as a variant of Homo erectus. They also proposed a late date for the Dinaledi material, namely 900 thousand years.

Schroeder et al. (2016SCHROEDER L, SCOTT JE, GARVIN HM, LAIRD MF, DEMBO M, RADOVČIĆ D, BERGER LR, DE RUITER DJ AND ACKERMANN RR. 2016. Skull diversity in the Homo lineage and the relative position of Homo naledi. J Hum Evol 104: 124-135.) performed a geometric morphometric analysis based on skulls D1-D5. In their analysis Homo naledi aligned with members of genus Homo, with closest affinities to Homo erectus. In fact, the analysis revealed a unique combination of features in the Dinaledi material: Homo erectus-like cranium and less derived mandible morphology.

Here we present a phenetic analysis of the craniodental metric data of H. naledi through a multivariate analysis.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The cranial and dental metric information was obtained from Tables 1 and 2 of Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.). As can be seen in these tables, the craniometric variables took by Berger and associates covered all main regions of the neurocranium and face, not to mention the mandible. In other words, we believe that the cranial morphology of the fossil hominids included in their analysis were appropriately characterized. Two variables listed in Table I of the original publication were not used in our study, namely “closest approach of temporal lines”, and “root of zygomatic process origin”.

In the case of the dental traits, mesio-distal diameters were multiplied by the buco-lingual diameters to generate a proxy for dental crown area. Principal Components Analyses (Somers 1986SOMERS KM. 1986. Multivariate Allometry and Removal of Size with Principal Components Analysis. Syst Biol 35: 359-368., 1989, Bryant and Yarnold 1995, Everitt and Dunn 2001) were carried out considering size and shape of two distinct matrices: one more inclusive formed exclusively by craniometric measures (24 variables) and 12 taxa; and one less inclusive formed by craniometric plus dental metrics (40 variables), but only 8 taxa. This strategy had to be adopted because, for unknown reasons, Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.) presented no dental information for the robust Australopithecines. In both cases a covariance matrix was used to generate the PCs (Gower 1966GOWER JC. 1966. Some Distance Properties of Latent Root and Vector Methods Used in Multivariate Analysis. Biometrika 53: 325-338.).

RESULTS

Figure 1a presents the position of each taxon in the morpho-space formed by PCs 1 and 2 when only cranial morphology is considered. Both PCs summarize 99% of the original information contained in the dataset. Principal Component 1 is mainly influenced by the following variables: cranial capacity, bi-parietal breadth, and minimum post-orbital breadth. PC 2 is mostly influenced by superior facial breadth, palate depth at M1, and symphysis height. As can be seen in the figure, there is a strong association between Homo naledi, Homo habilis, and Australopithecus sediba which occupy the central upper part of the graph.

Figure 1
More inclusive analysis, performed over 24 craniometric variables and 12 hominin taxa. 1a (above) Bidimensional graph formed by the first two Principal Components, showing the morphological affinities among H. naledi with its contemporary fossil hominins. 1b (below) Dendrogram obtained by means of the Cluster Analysis, following Single Linkage criteria over Euclidian Distance matrix obtained from the first three Principal Components, showing the close relationship among Homo naledi, Homo habilis and Australopithecus sediba.

Figure 1b presents a graphic representation of a Cluster Analysis, using an Euclidian Distances Matrix based on the scores of the first three principal components (accounting for 99.69% of the original information) under a Single Linkage algorithm as linkage criteria (Gower and Ross 1969). Again, Homo naledi, Australopithecus sediba, and Homo habilis have clustered together.

Figure 2a presents the position of each taxon in the morpho-space also formed by PCs 1 and 2 when craniodental information is considered. Both PCs summarize 96.84% of the original information. Principal Component 1 is mainly influenced by the following variables: cranial capacity, bi-parietal breadth, and bi-temporal breadth. PC2 is mostly influenced by symphysis area at M1 (as an ellipse), and crown area of the upper canine. As can be seen in the figure, there is again a strong association between Homo naledi, Homo habilis, and Australopithecus sediba. The three taxa occupy the upper left quadrant of the graphic.

Figure 2
Less inclusive analysis, counting only 8 taxa, performed over 40 craniodental metric variables. 2a (above) Bidimensional graph formed by the first two Principal Components, showing the strong morphological association between Homo naledi, Homo habilis, and Australopithecus sediba in comparison with their contemporary fossil hominins. 2b (below) Dendrogram obtained as result of the Cluster Analysis based on the Euclidian Distance matrix calculated from the first four Principal Components, showing the morphological similarity among Homo naledi, Homo habilis and Australopithecus sediba.

Figure 2b presents a graphic representation of the results of a Cluster Analysis based on the scores of the first four principal components (accounting for 99.47% of the original information) departing from Euclidian distances using the Single Linkage criteria. Again, Homo naledi, Australopithecus sediba and Homo habilis cluster together.

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS

Differently from what Berger et al. (2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.) have proposed as the most possible scenario to interpret their new findings, our results strongly suggest that Homo naledi has a marked dentocranial similarity with Homo habilis, and with Australopithecus sediba. There is no clear association between Homo naledi and Homo erectus in any of the morpho-spaces and topologies generated by our analyses (contra Berger et al. 2015).

Based on our results, Homo naledi can be interpreted as a South African variety of Homo habilis, and the same can be said of Australopitecus sediba. From the point of view of phenetics, there is no reason to propose that the Dinaledi findings pertain to a new species of Homo (contra Berger et al. 2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.).

The presence of Homo habilis in South Africa has been for a long time a much-debated subject in Paleoanthropology (Grine et al. 1993GRINE FE, DEMES B, JUNGERS WL AND COLE III TM. 1993. Taxonomic affinity of the early Homo cranium from Swartkrans, South Africa. Am J Phys Anthropol 92: 411-426., Kuman and Clarke 2000, Curnoe and Tobias 2006, Smith and Grine 2008, for a few examples), and the idea that the Homo-like South African specimens can be classified in this taxon is far from consensus (Grine 2005, Curnoe 2010).

A deep discussion about the origins of genus Homo is out of the scope of this study. However, a few words can be said about the subject to better contextualize our findings. Until recently, the earliest specimens of Homo habilis (supposed to be the first species of our genus) were firmly dated up to 2.0 mya in East Africa (Olduwai and East Turkana) (Leakey et al. 1964LEAKEY SB, TOBIAS PV AND NAPIER JR. 1964. A new species of the genus Homo from Olduvai Gorge. Nature 202: 7-9., Johanson et al. 1987JOHANSON DC, MASAO FT, ECK GG, WHITE TD, WALTER RC, KIMBEL WH, ASFAW B, MANEGA P, NDESSOKIA P AND SUWA G. 1987. New partial skeleton of Homo habilis from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Nature 327: 205-209.). In the last decades, older fossils are claimed to belong to the genus Homo, such as the dentition from Shungura Formation (Suwa 1988SUWA G. 1988. Evolution of the “robust” australopithecines in the Omo succession: evidence from mandibular premolar morphology. In: Grine FE (Ed), Evolutionary History of the “Robust” Australopithecines. New York: Aldine de Gruyter, p. 199-222., Suwa et al. 1996) and Nachukui Formation (Prat et al. 2005PRAT S ET AL. 2005. First occurrence of early Homo in the Nachukui Formation (West Turkana, Kenya) at 2.3-2.4 Myr. J Hum Evol 49: 230-240.), the maxilla from Hadar (Kimbel et al. 1996KIMBEL WH ET AL. 1996. Late Pliocene Homo and Oldowan Tools from the Hadar Formation (Kada Hadar Member), Ethiopia. J Hum Evol 31: 549-561., 1997), the partial temporal bone from Chemeron Formation (Martyn 1967MARTYN J. 1967. Pleistocene deposits and new fossils localities in Kenya. Nature 215: 235-262., Day 1986DAY M. 1986. Guide to fossil man. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 448 p., Tobias 1991TOBIAS PV. 1991, Olduvai Gorge, vol. 4. Homo habilis: skulls, endocasts and teeth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 921 p., Sherwood et al. 2002SHERWOOD RJ, WARD SC AND HILL A. 2002. The taxonomic status of the Chemeron temporal (KNM-BC 1). J Hum Evol 42: 153-184.), and the mandible from the Chiwondo Bed (Bromage et al. 1995BROMAGE TG, SCHRENK F AND ZONNEVELD FW. 1995. Paleoanthropology of the Malawi Rift: An early hominid mandible from the Chiwondo Beds, northern Malawi. J Hum Evol 28: 71-108.). They suggest a possible chronology as deep as 2.3 million years to this species. Very recent findings in Ledi-Geraru, Afar State, in Ethiopia, suggest that this date could be extended back to 2.8 million years (Villmoare et al. 2015VILLMOARE B, KIMBEL WH, SEYOUM C, CAMPISANO CJ, DIMAGGIO EN, ROWAN J, BRAUN DR, ARROWSMITH JR AND REED KE. 2015. Early Homo at 2.8 Ma from Ledi-Geraru, Afar, Ethiopia. Science 347: 1352-1355.). Here, we will assume a conservative point of view, namely that the earliest date for Homo habilis is 2.3 mya in East Africa (Prat et al. 2005).

Several candidates are suggested as possible ancestors of Homo. The most cited are Australopithecus afarensis, Australopithecus garhi, and Australopithecus sediba (Kimbel et al. 1994KIMBEL WH, JOHANSON DC AND RAK Y. 1994. The first skull and other new discoveries of Australopithecus afarensis at Hadar, Ethiopia. Nature 368: 449-451., White et al. 1994WHITE TD, SUWA G AND ASFAW B. 1994. Australopithecus ramidus, a new species of early hominid from Aramis Ethiopia ,. Nature 371: 306-312., Asfaw et al. 1999ASFAW B, WHITE T, LOVEJOY O, LATIMER B, SIMPSON S AND SUWA G. 1999. Australopithecus garhi: A New Species of Early Hominid from Ethiopia. Science 284: 629-635, Strait et al. 1999STRAIT DS, GRINE FE, ASFAW B, WHITE T, LOVEJOY O, LATIMER B, SIMPSON S, SUWA G AND MCCOLLUM M. 1999. Cladistics and Early Hominid Phylogeny. Science. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.285.5431.1209c.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.285.54...
, McHenry and Coffing 2000, Reno et al. 2003RENO PL, MEINDL RS, MCCOLLUM MA AND LOVEJOY CO. 2003. Sexual dimorphism in Australopithecus afarensis was similar to that of modern humans. P Natl Acad Sci USA 100: 9404-9409., Berger et al. 2010BERGER LR, DE RUITER DJ, CHURCHILL SE, SCHMID P, CARLSON KJ, DIRKS PHGM AND KIBII JM. 2010. Australopithecus sediba: A New Species of Homo-Like Australopith from South Africa. Science 328: 195-204., Pickering et al. 2011PICKERING R, DIRKS PHGM, JINNAH Z, DE RUITER DJ, CHURCHILL SE, HERRIES AIR, WOODHEAD JD, HELLSTROM JC AND BERGER LR. 2011. Australopithecus sediba at 1.977 Ma and Implications for the Origins of the Genus Homo. Science 333: 1421-1423.). In the first case, chronology is a problematic matter. The latest remains of Australopithecus afarensis are dated to around 3.0 mya. If Homo habilis appeared around 2.3 mya, there is a gap of 700 thousand years between these two species. Australopithecus garhi, which is chronologically appropriate to be the ancestor of Homo habilis, presents a morphological preclusion to play this role: it has large dental dimensions, mainly in the post canine teeth, while Homo habilis presents a small dentition. Australopithecus sediba has also a chronological impediment to be ancestral of early Homo: it has been dated to 1.9 mya (Dirks et al. 2010DIRKS PHGM ET AL. 2010. Geological Setting and Age of Austrolopithecus sediba from Southern Africa. Science 328: 205-208.), younger than the first Homo habilis in East Africa.

A parsimonious scenario to support our results is that Homo habilis first appeared in East Africa around 2.3 mya (if not around 2.8 myr) and expanded southward, eventually arriving in South Africa around 2.0 mya. However, this long journey was not enough to modify its basic cranial bauplan. If this scenario is correct, the skeletal remains found in Dinadeli are probably dated around 2.0 mya, as old as Australopithecus sediba. Future chronological information about the Dinadeli findings will be necessary to test our proposal.

Do our results fit into what other studies have proposed about the phylogenetic ties of the Dinaledi? This is a very difficult question to answer. As presented in the introductory section of this paper, different analyses have reached different scenarios to accommodate Homo nadeli in the phylogenetic tree of our Plio-Pleistocene ancestors. However, they all reached one same conclusion: this material pertains to genus Homo (Berger et al. 2015BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956., Thakeray 2015, Dembo et al. 2016DEMBO M ET AL. 2016. The evolutionary relationships and age of Homo naledi: An assessment using Bayesian phylogenetic methods. J Hum Evol 97: 17-26., Laird et al. 2016LAIRD MF, SCHOROEDER L, GARVIN HM, SCOTT JE, DEMBO M, RADOVČIĆ D, MUSIVA CM, ACKERMANN RR AND SCHMID P. 2016. The skull of Homo naledi. J Hum Evol 104: 100-123., Schroeder et al. 2016SCHROEDER L, SCOTT JE, GARVIN HM, LAIRD MF, DEMBO M, RADOVČIĆ D, BERGER LR, DE RUITER DJ AND ACKERMANN RR. 2016. Skull diversity in the Homo lineage and the relative position of Homo naledi. J Hum Evol 104: 124-135.). Dembo et al. (2016) detected some ties with Australopithecus sediba, an association clearly found in our analyses. A strong association of Homo naledi with Homo habilis was suggested by the results achieved by Thakeray (2015), what also converges with our results.

In summary, our analyses generated a much clearer picture about the new findings in South Africa when compared to previous investigations. Homo habilis, Homo naledi, and Australopithecus sediba seem to pertain to a single taxon, namely Homo habilis. Future work based on more fossil material from East and South Africa, better chronological contextualization of Homo naledi, and the use of more sophisticated statistical tools will be of paramount importance to a better comprehension of the taxonomical and phylogenetic status of the Dinadeli chamber remains, if not of the diversity of early Homo in Africa as a whole.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors would like to thank André Strauss for encouraging this work and for sharing his knowledge about the subject. We are also indebted to Pedro da Gloria, for the revision of the English. During the writing of this article, the authors received funding from Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) - process 300917/2010-4 to WAN and process 461122/2014-6 to DVB, and from Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) - process 2013/22631-2 to WAN.

REFERENCES

  • ASFAW B, WHITE T, LOVEJOY O, LATIMER B, SIMPSON S AND SUWA G. 1999. Australopithecus garhi: A New Species of Early Hominid from Ethiopia. Science 284: 629-635
  • BERGER LR, DE RUITER DJ, CHURCHILL SE, SCHMID P, CARLSON KJ, DIRKS PHGM AND KIBII JM. 2010. Australopithecus sediba: A New Species of Homo-Like Australopith from South Africa. Science 328: 195-204.
  • BERGER LR ET AL. 2015. A new species of Homo from the Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa. eLIFE 4: e0956.
  • BROMAGE TG, SCHRENK F AND ZONNEVELD FW. 1995. Paleoanthropology of the Malawi Rift: An early hominid mandible from the Chiwondo Beds, northern Malawi. J Hum Evol 28: 71-108.
  • BRYANT FB AND YARNOLD PR. 1995. Principal-components analysis and exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. In: Grimm L and Yarnold PR (Eds), Reading and understanding multivariate statistics. Washington:American Psychological Association, p. 99-136.
  • CURNOE D. 2010. A review of early Homo in southern Africa focusing on cranial, mandibular and dental remains, with the description of a new species (Homo gautengensis sp. nov). Homo 61: 151-177.
  • CURNOE D AND TOBIAS PV. 2006. Description, new reconstruction, comparative anatomy and classification of the Sterkfontein Stw 53 cranium, with discussions about the taxonomy of other Southern African early Homo remains. J Hum Evol 50: 36-77.
  • DAY M. 1986. Guide to fossil man. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 448 p.
  • DEMBO M ET AL. 2016. The evolutionary relationships and age of Homo naledi: An assessment using Bayesian phylogenetic methods. J Hum Evol 97: 17-26.
  • DIRKS PHGM ET AL. 2010. Geological Setting and Age of Austrolopithecus sediba from Southern Africa. Science 328: 205-208.
  • EVERITT BS AND DUNN G. 2001. Principal Components Analysis. In: Everitt BS and Dunn G (Eds), Applied Multivariate Data Analysis, Second Edition. West Sussex: J Wiley & Sons, doi: 10.1002/9781118887486.ch3.
    » https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118887486.ch3.
  • GOWER JC. 1966. Some Distance Properties of Latent Root and Vector Methods Used in Multivariate Analysis. Biometrika 53: 325-338.
  • GOWER JC AND ROSS GJS. 1969. Minimum Spanning Trees and Single Linkage Cluster Analysis. J Roy Stat Soc C-APP 18: 54-64.
  • GRINE FE. 2005. Early Homo at Swartkrans, South Africa: a review of the evidence and an evaluation of recently proposed morphs. S Afr J Sci 101: 43-52.
  • GRINE FE, DEMES B, JUNGERS WL AND COLE III TM. 1993. Taxonomic affinity of the early Homo cranium from Swartkrans, South Africa. Am J Phys Anthropol 92: 411-426.
  • JOHANSON DC, MASAO FT, ECK GG, WHITE TD, WALTER RC, KIMBEL WH, ASFAW B, MANEGA P, NDESSOKIA P AND SUWA G. 1987. New partial skeleton of Homo habilis from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. Nature 327: 205-209.
  • KIMBEL WH, JOHANSON DC AND RAK Y. 1994. The first skull and other new discoveries of Australopithecus afarensis at Hadar, Ethiopia. Nature 368: 449-451.
  • KIMBEL WH, JOHANSON DC AND RAK Y. 1997. Systematic assessment of a maxilla of Homo from Hadar, Ethiopia. Am J Phys Anthropol 103: 235-262.
  • KIMBEL WH ET AL. 1996. Late Pliocene Homo and Oldowan Tools from the Hadar Formation (Kada Hadar Member), Ethiopia. J Hum Evol 31: 549-561.
  • KUMAN K AND CLARKE RJ. 2000. Stratigraphy, artefact industries and hominid associations for Sterkfontein, Member 5. J Hum Evol 38(6): 827-847.
  • LAIRD MF, SCHOROEDER L, GARVIN HM, SCOTT JE, DEMBO M, RADOVČIĆ D, MUSIVA CM, ACKERMANN RR AND SCHMID P. 2016. The skull of Homo naledi J Hum Evol 104: 100-123.
  • LEAKEY SB, TOBIAS PV AND NAPIER JR. 1964. A new species of the genus Homo from Olduvai Gorge. Nature 202: 7-9.
  • MARTYN J. 1967. Pleistocene deposits and new fossils localities in Kenya. Nature 215: 235-262.
  • MCHENRY HM AND COFFING L. 2000. Australopithecus to Homo: Transformations in Body and Mind. Annu Rev Anthropol 29: 125-146.
  • PICKERING R, DIRKS PHGM, JINNAH Z, DE RUITER DJ, CHURCHILL SE, HERRIES AIR, WOODHEAD JD, HELLSTROM JC AND BERGER LR. 2011. Australopithecus sediba at 1.977 Ma and Implications for the Origins of the Genus Homo Science 333: 1421-1423.
  • PRAT S ET AL. 2005. First occurrence of early Homo in the Nachukui Formation (West Turkana, Kenya) at 2.3-2.4 Myr. J Hum Evol 49: 230-240.
  • RENO PL, MEINDL RS, MCCOLLUM MA AND LOVEJOY CO. 2003. Sexual dimorphism in Australopithecus afarensis was similar to that of modern humans. P Natl Acad Sci USA 100: 9404-9409.
  • SCHROEDER L, SCOTT JE, GARVIN HM, LAIRD MF, DEMBO M, RADOVČIĆ D, BERGER LR, DE RUITER DJ AND ACKERMANN RR. 2016. Skull diversity in the Homo lineage and the relative position of Homo naledi J Hum Evol 104: 124-135.
  • SHERWOOD RJ, WARD SC AND HILL A. 2002. The taxonomic status of the Chemeron temporal (KNM-BC 1). J Hum Evol 42: 153-184.
  • SMITH HF AND GRINE FE. 2008. Cladistic analysis of early Homo crania from Swartkrans and Sterkfontein, South Africa. J Hum Evol 54: 684-704.
  • SOMERS KM. 1986. Multivariate Allometry and Removal of Size with Principal Components Analysis. Syst Biol 35: 359-368.
  • SOMERS KM. 1989. Allometry, Isometry and Shape in Principal Components Analysis. Syst Zool 38: 169-173.
  • STRAIT DS, GRINE FE, ASFAW B, WHITE T, LOVEJOY O, LATIMER B, SIMPSON S, SUWA G AND MCCOLLUM M. 1999. Cladistics and Early Hominid Phylogeny. Science. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.285.5431.1209c
    » http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.285.5431.1209c
  • SUWA G. 1988. Evolution of the “robust” australopithecines in the Omo succession: evidence from mandibular premolar morphology. In: Grine FE (Ed), Evolutionary History of the “Robust” Australopithecines. New York: Aldine de Gruyter, p. 199-222.
  • SUWA G. 1990. A comparative analysis of hominid dental remains from the Shungura and Usno Formations, Omo Valley, Ethiopia. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms, 524 p.
  • SUWA G, WHITE TD AND HOWELL FC. 1996. Mandibular postcanine dentition from the Shungura Formation, Ethiopia: crown morphology, taxonomic allocations, and Plio-Pleistocene hominid evolution. Am J Phys Anthropol 101: 24-82.
  • THACKERAY JF. 2015. Estimating the age and affinities of Homo naledi S Afr J Sci 111: 11-12.
  • TOBIAS PV. 1991, Olduvai Gorge, vol. 4. Homo habilis: skulls, endocasts and teeth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 921 p.
  • VILLMOARE B, KIMBEL WH, SEYOUM C, CAMPISANO CJ, DIMAGGIO EN, ROWAN J, BRAUN DR, ARROWSMITH JR AND REED KE. 2015. Early Homo at 2.8 Ma from Ledi-Geraru, Afar, Ethiopia. Science 347: 1352-1355.
  • WHITE TD, SUWA G AND ASFAW B. 1994. Australopithecus ramidus, a new species of early hominid from Aramis Ethiopia ,. Nature 371: 306-312.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    24 July 2017
  • Date of issue
    2017

History

  • Received
    02 Dec 2016
  • Accepted
    21 Feb 2017
Academia Brasileira de Ciências Rua Anfilófio de Carvalho, 29, 3º andar, 20030-060 Rio de Janeiro RJ Brasil, Tel: +55 21 3907-8100 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: aabc@abc.org.br