Department of Biology, University of North Georgia, Dahlonega, GA, USA.
Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2019 Jul;3(7):1048-1056. doi: 10.1038/s41559-019-0916-0. Epub 2019 Jun 17.
It has been suggested that a shift in diet is one of the key adaptations that distinguishes the genus Homo from earlier hominins, but recent stable isotopic analyses of fossils attributed to Homo in the Turkana Basin show an increase in the consumption of C resources circa 1.65 million years ago, significantly after the earliest evidence for Homo in the eastern African fossil record. These data are consistent with ingesting more C plants, more animal tissues of C herbivores, or both, but it is also possible that this change reflects factors unrelated to changes in the palaeobiology of the genus Homo. Here we use new and published carbon and oxygen isotopic data (n = 999) taken from large-bodied fossil mammals, and pedogenic carbonates in fossil soils, from East Turkana in northern Kenya to investigate the context of this change in the isotope signal within Homo. By targeting taxa and temporal intervals unrepresented or undersampled in previous analyses, we were able to conduct the first comprehensive analysis of the ecological context of hominin diet at East Turkana during a period crucial for detecting any dietary and related behavioural differences between early Homo (H. habilis and/or H. rudolfensis) and Homo erectus. Our analyses suggest that the genus Homo underwent a dietary shift (as indicated by δC and δO values) that is (1) unrelated to changes in the East Turkana vegetation community and (2) unlike patterns found in other East Turkana large mammals, including Paranthropus and Theropithecus. These data suggest that within the Turkana Basin a dietary shift occurred well after we see the first evidence of early Homo in the region.
有人认为,饮食的改变是人类属与早期原始人类区分开来的关键适应之一,但最近对东非图尔卡纳盆地中归因于人类的化石进行的稳定同位素分析显示,C 资源的消耗在大约 165 万年前增加,明显晚于东非化石记录中人类最早的证据。这些数据与摄入更多的 C 植物、更多的 C 食草动物的动物组织或两者都有关,但也有可能这种变化反映了与人类属的古生物学变化无关的因素。在这里,我们使用了来自肯尼亚北部东图尔卡纳的大型化石哺乳动物和化石土壤中土壤碳酸盐的新的和已发表的碳和氧同位素数据(n=999),来研究同位素信号变化在人类中的背景。通过针对以前分析中未代表或采样不足的分类群和时间间隔,我们能够首次对东图尔卡纳人类饮食的生态背景进行全面分析,这对于检测早期人类(能人或鲁道夫人)和直立人之间的任何饮食和相关行为差异至关重要。我们的分析表明,人类属经历了饮食的改变(如 δC 和 δO 值所示),这是(1)与东图尔卡纳植被群落的变化无关,(2)与其他东图尔卡纳大型哺乳动物的模式不同,包括傍人属和狒狒属。这些数据表明,在图尔卡纳盆地中,饮食的改变发生在我们在该地区首次发现早期人类之后很久。