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In an article published in the open-access, peer-reviewed journal PLoS ONE on October 21, 2009, Dr Thomas Plummer of Queens College at the City
University of New York, Dr Richard Potts of the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History and colleagues report the oldest
archeological evidence of early human activities in a grassland environment, dating to 2 million years ago. The article highlights new research and
its implications concerning the environments in which human ancestors evolved.
Scientists as far back as Charles Darwin have thought that adaptation to grassland environments profoundly influenced the course of human evolution.
This idea has remained well-entrenched, even with recent recognition that hominin origins took place in a woodland environment and that the adaptive
landscape in Africa fluctuated dramatically in response to short-term climatic shifts.
During the critical time period between 3 and 1.5 million years ago, the origin of lithic technology and archeological sites, the evolution of Homo
and Paranthropus, selection for endurance running, and novel thermoregulatory adaptations to hot, dry environments in H. erectus have all been linked
to increasingly open environments in Africa.
However, ecosystems in which grassland prevails have not been documented in the geological record of Pliocene hominin evolution, so it has been
unclear whether open habitats were even available to hominins, and, if so, whether hominins utilized them. In their new study, Plummer and colleagues
provide the first documentation of both at the 2-million-year-old Oldowan archeological site of Kanjera South, Kenya, which has yielded both Oldowan
artifacts and well-preserved faunal remains, allowing researchers to reconstruct past ecosystems.
The researchers report chemical analyses of ancient soils and mammalian teeth, as well as other faunal data, from the ~2.0-million-year-old
archeological sites at Kanjera South, located in western Kenya. The principal collaborating institutions of the Kanjera project are QueensCollege of
the City University of New York, the Smithsonian Institution's Human Origins Program, and the NationalMuseums of Kenya. The findings demonstrate that
the recently excavated archeological sites that preserve Oldowan tools, the oldest-known type of stone technolog y, were located in a
grassland-dominated ecosystem during the crucial time period.
The study documents what was previously speculated based on indirect evidence - that grassland-dominated ecosystems did, in fact, exist during the
Plio-Pleistocene (ca. 2.5-1.5 million years ago) and that early human tool-makers were active in open settings. Other recent research shows that the
Kanjera hominins obtained meat and bone marrow from a variety of animals and that they carried stone raw materials over surprisingly long distances in
this grassland setting. A comparison with other Oldowan sites shows that by 2.0 million years ago, hominins, almost certainly of the genus Homo, lived
in a wide range of habitats in East Africa, from open grassland to woodland and dry forest.
Plummer and colleagues conclude that early Homo was flexible in its habitat use and that the ability to find resources in both open and wooded
habitats was a key part of its adaptation. This strongly contrasts with the habitat usage of older species of Australopithecus and appears to signify
an important shift in early humans' use of the landscape.
Public Library of Science