Stringer Christopher Brian, Buck Laura Tabitha
Natural History Museum , Cromwell Road, London , UK and.
Ann Hum Biol. 2014 Jul-Aug;41(4):312-22. doi: 10.3109/03014460.2014.922616.
Diagnosing Homo sapiens is a critical question in the study of human evolution. Although what constitutes living members of our own species is straightforward, in the fossil record this is still a matter of much debate. The issue is complicated by questions of species diagnoses and ideas about the mode by which a new species is born, by the arguments surrounding the behavioural and cognitive separateness of the species, by the increasing appreciation of variation in the early African H. sapiens record and by new DNA evidence of hybridization with extinct species.
This study synthesizes thinking on the fossils, archaeology and underlying evolutionary models of the last several decades with recent DNA results from both H. sapiens and fossil species.
It is concluded that, although it may not be possible or even desirable to cleanly partition out a homogenous morphological description of recent H. sapiens in the fossil record, there are key, distinguishing morphological traits in the cranium, dentition and pelvis that can be usefully employed to diagnose the H. sapiens lineage. Increasing advances in retrieving and understanding relevant genetic data provide a complementary and perhaps potentially even more fruitful means of characterizing the differences between H. sapiens and its close relatives.
在人类进化研究中,诊断现代人是一个关键问题。虽然构成我们自己物种的现存成员很明确,但在化石记录中,这仍然是一个备受争议的问题。物种诊断问题以及关于新物种诞生方式的观点、围绕该物种行为和认知独立性的争论、对早期非洲现代人化石记录中变异的日益重视以及与已灭绝物种杂交的新DNA证据,都使这个问题变得复杂。
本研究将过去几十年关于化石、考古学及潜在进化模型的思考与来自现代人及化石物种的最新DNA结果进行了综合。
得出的结论是,尽管在化石记录中可能无法甚至也不希望清晰地划分出近期现代人的同质形态描述,但在颅骨、牙齿和骨盆中有一些关键的、具有区别性的形态特征,可有效地用于诊断现代人谱系。在获取和理解相关基因数据方面的不断进步提供了一种互补的、甚至可能更有成效的方法来描述现代人与近亲之间的差异。