All posts tagged: fossil teeth

Neanderthals began life more like humans than scientists thought

Neanderthals began life more like humans than scientists thought

Neanderthal babies have always been hard to study, mostly because their remains are so rare. That scarcity has left one of the oldest arguments in human origins unsettled: were Neanderthals following a fundamentally different developmental path from the start, or did the gap between them and modern humans open later? A set of fragile bones and milk teeth from Sesselfelsgrotte cave in Lower Bavaria now pushes that debate in a clearer direction. Using high-resolution micro-CT scans, an international team examined bone fragments from a Neanderthal fetus and two milk teeth from two young children who lived roughly 75,000 to 50,000 years ago. What they found suggests that, at least late in pregnancy, Neanderthals were developing in ways that looked remarkably familiar. “Our results indicate that both human forms progressed through strikingly similar growth processes, at least during the later stages of pregnancy,” said Prof. Dr. Thorsten Uthmeier, Chair of Prehistoric Archaeology at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. Prof. Dr. Thorsten Uthmeier, Chair of Prehistoric Archaeology at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. (CREDIT: Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg) The work adds weight to a broader …

Homo erectus and modern humans may have more in common than previously thought

Homo erectus and modern humans may have more in common than previously thought

A handful of ancient teeth from China are giving scientists an unusual look at one of the hardest chapters in human evolution to read. For decades, Homo erectus has stood at the center of that mystery. The species was the first known member of the human genus to leave Africa, spreading across huge stretches of Eurasia and lasting for nearly 2 million years. Yet even with its importance, researchers have had little molecular evidence to work with. Fossils of H. erectus are rare and culturally invaluable, which has made destructive testing a nonstarter in many cases. That impasse may now be starting to shift. A team led by Fu Qiaomei of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences recovered protein evidence from six H. erectus teeth using a minimally invasive acid-etching technique that left the teeth’s overall morphology intact. The work, published in Nature, points to a possible genetic connection between East Asian H. erectus, Denisovans, and some present-day human populations. It also offers a new way to study …

Ancient teeth unlock million-year-old secrets of where early humans evolved

Ancient teeth unlock million-year-old secrets of where early humans evolved

Teeth are like tiny biological time capsules. They tell stories about ancient diets and environments long after their owners have died and landscapes have changed. After bones break down, tooth enamel stays hard and unchanged, even in fossilized teeth that have been buried under sediment and rock for millions of years and are now being uncovered by erosion or excavation. Tooth enamel forms when an animal is young, and it remains chemically stable for the rest of that animal’s life. The food an animal eats and the water it drinks during its youth leave chemical signals within the enamel. Because of that, hidden within the enamel of fossilized teeth, scientists can find traces of extinct forests, expanding savanna grasslands, shifting climates and evolving animal communities. A small group of oryx forage in the open savanna of Awash National Park in Ethiopia, with scattered acacia trees and dry grasses illustrating the park’s semi-arid environment. (CREDIT: Zelalem Bedaso) These clues from ancient meals are enabling scientists to reconstruct pictures of entire ecosystems, including forests, wetlands and grasslands that existed at the time. It’s …