On Tuesday, paleoanthropologists led by Paul Dirks at James Cook University revealed in the journal eLife that Homo naledi, a small-brained hominin found in South Africa, lived — and may have cared for their dead in careful, intentional ways — as recently as 236,000 years ago.
This was, to put it mildly, a surprise. Homo naledi shows an intriguing mix of characteristics — a small brain, curved fingers (apparently an adaptation related to tree-climbing) and certain primitive-looking joints but more modern-looking teeth, hands (except for the finger curvature), legs, and feet. The suspicion, since the fossils were first discovered by Lee Berger of the University of Witwatersrand and his team at Rising Star cave in 2013 (described here in 2015), was that they were perhaps as old as two million years.
As described in the new paper, the far more recent date — somewhere in the range between 335,000 and 236,000 years old — was derived by a combination of six different techniques, including dating of flowstone residues on the cave-chamber walls and ESR, or electronic spin resonance, dating of tooth enamel from Homo naledi.
Published on Tuesday in conjunction with the journal article, Berger's new book Almost Human tells the story of Homo naledi's discovery in a deep and inaccessible chamber of the Rising Star cave. The excavation gained fame worldwide for several reasons: 15 hominin individuals were found, the single largest cache of ancient humans ever uncovered in Africa. Plus, the expedition was filmed as it happened — not to mention tweeted and live-blogged — resulting in a joint NOVA-National Geographic documentary that coincided with the first journal publication.
Berger's final chapter focuses on the new information coming out of Rising Star — the excavation of a second chamber with more Homo naledi individuals, the process of coming up with the recent date — and on making a case for intentional "depositing" of bodies as the reason the fossils ended up in the two cave chambers.
Berger could tell early on that the hominin individuals had not been dragged by carnivores or washed by moving waters to their final resting place in the original cave chamber. The excavation of the second chamber has now led him to even more certainty about as to the explanation. Berger writes:
The upshot, then, as Berger sees it, is that Homo naledi may have carried out quite complex behaviors, despite a small brain and during a relatively recent time period that might have overlapped with our immediate ancestors. (Our own species Homo sapiens is first known from Africa only at 200,000 years ago, so we are "younger" than Homo naledi.)
My own work about response to death is in the area of expressed grief in a variety of animals — not in care-taking of bodies after death. Still, based on what I have learned, I don't think it's out of the question at all that a human-like species with a small brain might have curated its dead in the way Berger describes.
Sarah Wild, writing at Nature underscores, though, that these claims aren't accepted by everyone. Paleoanthropologist Chris Stringer at the Natural History Museum in London told her:
I truly love this kind of debate and discussion about our past — about the evolutionary trajectory that resulted in this ability to debate and discuss our origins, in a way that no other species does. Certainly, the new date forces us to think hard in new ways. As Sarah Zhang writes in The Atlantic on Tuesday:
Three weeks before the Homo naledi announcement, a team of paleontologists and archaeologists led by Steven Holen of the San Diego Natural History Museum presented evidence from a mastodon site in coastal California to suggest that North America was first colonized by people — perhaps Neanderthals or another ancient species — 130,000 years ago. This, too, was a major surprise; the accepted wisdom had been that people arrived on this continent only about 14,500 years ago.
The heart of the argument in this case rests on dating techniques — and on the way the thick mastodon bones had been processed with hammerstones and anvils.
In that case, too, intense debates and discussions resulted. Hannah Hoag, writing in Sapiens magazine, notes:
In both cases — with Homo naledi and with the California mastodon site — that fierce scrutiny both during and after peer-reviewed publication is exactly how it should be.
If both studies hold up, they represent dizzying changes to our understanding of our own evolutionary trajectory.
Barbara J. King is an anthropology professor emerita at the College of William and Mary. She often writes about the cognition, emotion and welfare of animals, and about biological anthropology, human evolution and gender issues. Barbara's new book is Personalities on the Plate: The Lives and Minds of Animals We Eat. You can keep up with what she is thinking on Twitter: @bjkingape
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