Study: Ancient hominid males stayed home while females roamed

June 1, 2011
Study: Ancient hominid males stayed home while females roamed

Enlarge

A new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder indicates that the males of two ancient homind species, including Paranthropus robustus, pictured here, stayed home while the females roamed. Credit: Illustration courtesy of Walter Voigt/Lee Berger/Brett Hilton-Barber

The males of two bipedal hominid species that roamed the South African savannah more than a million years ago were stay-at-home kind of guys when compared to the gadabout gals, says a new high-tech study led by the University of Colorado Boulder.

The team, which studied teeth from a group of extinct Australopithecus africanus and Paranthropus robustus individuals from two adjacent cave systems in South Africa, found more than half of the female teeth were from outside the local area, said CU-Boulder adjunct professor and lead study author Sandi Copeland. In contrast, only about 10 percent of the male hominid teeth were from elsewhere, suggesting they likely grew up and died in the same area.

"One of our goals was to try to find something out about early hominid landscape use," said Copeland, who also is affiliated with the Max Plank Institute for in Leipzig, Germany. "Here we have the first direct glimpse of the geographic movements of early hominids, and it appears the females preferentially moved away from their residential groups."

A paper on the subject is being published in the June 2 issue of Nature. Co-authors included CU-Boulder anthropology Professor Matt Sponheimer, Darryl de Ruiter from Texas A&M University, Julia Lee Thorp from the University of Oxford, Daryl Codron from the University of Zurich, Petrus le Roux from the University of Cape Town, Vaughan Grimes of Memorial University-St. John's campus in Newfoundland and Michael Richards of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

The new study results were somewhat surprising, said Copeland. "We assumed more of the hominids would be from non-local areas since it is generally thought the evolution of bipedalism was due in part to allow individuals to range longer distances," she said. "Such small home ranges could imply that bipedalism evolved for other reasons."

The team used a high-tech analysis known as laser ablation, zapping the hominid teeth with lasers to help them measure isotope ratios of strontium found in tooth enamel in order to identify specific areas of landscape use. A naturally occurring element, strontium is found in rocks and soils and is absorbed by plants and animals.

Since unique strontium signals are tied to specific geological substrates -- like granite, basalt, quartzite, sandstone and others -- they can be used to reveal landscape conditions where ancient hominids grew up, said Copeland. "The strontium isotope ratios are a direct reflection of the foods these hominids ate, which in turn are a reflection of the local geology."

The study was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Max Planck Society, a University of Colorado LEAP Associate Professor Growth Grant and the University of Colorado Dean's Fund for Excellence.

Study: Ancient hominid males stayed home while females roamed
Enlarge

This is a skull of a Paranthropus robustus from Swartkrans Cave in South Africa. Credit: Darryl de Ruiter

"It is difficult enough to work out relations between the sexes today, so the challenges in investigating the ways that male and female hominids used the landscape and formed social groups over a ago are considerable, to say the least," said CU-Boulder's Sponheimer. "Disembodied skulls and teeth are notoriously poor communicators, so the real difficulty with a study like this is finding new ways to make these old bones speak."

Strontium isotope signatures are locked into the molars of mammals by the end of tooth enamel formation -- for the hominids, probably at about eight or nine years old when they were traveling with their mothers. The Sterkfontein and Swartkans cave systems that yielded the teeth are less than a mile apart and dominated by a sedimentary carbonate rock known as dolomite, which has a distinct strontium signal, she said.

The team tested 19 teeth dating from roughly 2.7 to 1.7 million years ago from both Australopithecus africanus and Paranthropus robustus individuals from the two caves, which are well known for yielding valuable scientific data on hominid evolution.

Because the male hominids, like male humans, were larger than the females, the team used the size of individual molars to determine which were most likely from males or females, said Copeland. They also compared them to teeth and jaw fossils recovered from five early hominid sites in South Africa.

Both Paranthropus robustus and Australopithecus africanus were part of a line of close human relatives known as australopithecines that included the Ethiopian fossil, Lucy, estimated to be some 3.2 million years old and regarded by many as the matriarch of modern humans. While Australopithecus africanus may be a direct ancestor of modern humans, Paranthropus robustus and its close relative, Paranthropus boisei, both dead-ended on a side branch of the hominid family tree for reasons still unknown.

The female dispersal pattern believed seen in the two hominid groups is similar to that of many modern humans, chimpanzees and bonobos, said Copeland. But it is a dispersal pattern unlike most other primates -- including gorillas -- where the females stay with the group they are born into and the males move elsewhere. "This study gets us closer to understanding the social structure of ancient hominids since we now have a better idea about the dispersal patterns," she said.

The team also used laser ablation to zap 38 fossilized teeth of baboons, antelope, and small, rodent-like creatures known as hyraxes that lived in the same area at about the same time as the two australopithecine species under study. The results showed nearly all of the mammal teeth were local, implying such groups had relatively small home ranges, much like the australopithecine males, said Copeland.

A hominid tooth found in South Africa

A hominid tooth found in South Africa

While Sponheimer said the study could be taken as support for the position that bipedalism arose for reasons other than improved locomotion, the data might also indicate that many hominids simply preferred to live on dolomite substrates where caves would have been abundant. "I've never thought of these early male hominids as the quintessential cavemen, but the potential use of caves at this early time period is something worth considering."

In addition, the team analyzed more than 170 modern plants and animals within a 30-mile radius of the two cave systems, sampling 11 different geological substrates. The minimum distance from the cave systems to non-local geology areas is about two miles to the southeast, four miles to the northwest, and more than 20 miles each in northeast and southwest directions, said Copeland. It is still not clear where the roaming female australopithecines identified in the study spent their formative years, she said.

More information: Sandi R. Copeland, Matt Sponheimer, Darryl J. de Ruiter, Julia A. Lee-Thorp, Daryl Codron, Petrus J. le Roux, Vaughan Grimes & Michael P. Richards, Strontium isotope evidence for landscape use by early hominins, Nature, June 2, 2011, doi:10.1038/nature10149

Provided by University of Colorado at Boulder (news : web)

4.3 /5 (7 votes)  

Filter


Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.


Display comments: newest first

Sean_W
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: 4.3 / 5 (6)
I thought from the title that they were going to say that the females did the hunting and the males took care of the kids. Fred Flintston meets Mr Mom. Still sort of interesting. Maybe the females were running off with traveling salesmen.
TabulaMentis
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: 1.8 / 5 (6)
I thought from the title that they were going to say that the females did the hunting and the males took care of the kids. Fred Flintston meets Mr Mom. Still sort of interesting. Maybe the females were running off with traveling salesmen.
Right. Those guys were smart back then unless the women were hunting for the milkman. That's what may happen when the guys stay at home smoking weed looking at the cave wall drawings.
Unicorn333
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: 4.8 / 5 (6)
It may also be possible that they would have sent out 'raiding parties' to get their mates from different locales and therefore their strontium readings are so different.
emsquared
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: 4.7 / 5 (3)
It may also be possible that they would have sent out 'raiding parties' to get their mates from different locales and therefore their strontium readings are so different.

Good point, Uni! I was thinking they were maybe exchanging women across tribes to forge social/tribal bonds and such... yours is probably more realistic.
xznofile
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: 3 / 5 (1)
Not necessarily, just because they lived in caves doesn't mean they dragged their women by the hair, maybe males were territorial & females were a means of appeasing the rough necked people in the next valley. kind of like medieval royal marriages, but less formal.
xznofile
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Not necessarily, just because they lived in caves doesn't mean they dragged their women by the hair, maybe males were territorial & females were a means of appeasing the rough necked people in the next valley. kind of like medieval royal marriages, but less formal. Fills 3 evolutionary survival schedules: 1) keeps the tribe from getting attacked because they were related 2) selects for peaceful and communication traits among those involved 3) increases the relative value of the more successful tribes. We don't know that they didn't trade, and bride exchange is trade, though stealing isn't out of the question.
mrtea
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: 4.7 / 5 (3)
The idea of women leaving the tribe to seek more interesting mates seems fanciful. I would have thought a more likely interpretation is that females were bought and sold outside the group, as still happens in many parts of the world today. @emsquared - Exchanging women to improve tribal bonding is another possible reason.
Gilbert
Jun 01, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
in any case the title of the article is not an accurate representation of its content....well i guess when is it ever in journalism...uni emssqu points would be more valid, in any case the females clearly didn't "roam" as all the fossils were in locale to their territory/ camp/ home, not out scattered across the lands randomly
donnapuff
Jun 02, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
There isn't even enough evidence to conclude that they were indeed "roaming". I disagree with the verb usage here. Anyway, inter-tribal marriage could be the reason why the women "moved around".
elisevil
Jun 02, 2011

Rank: 2 / 5 (1)
Of our very closest extant relatives, the Bonobos and Chimpanzees, 50% have a free-love-for-peace society. The bonobos are female dominated and the adolescent girls often travel to new communities according to wikipedia. They then begin intense sexual bonding with the other females. It would be very difficult to analyze that out of a few teeth. Let's give the scientists the time to find evidence instead of developing "huntresses", "slavery" or "wife bartering" long before such manipulations would be so likely as they are with us big-brained homo sapiens.
Mayday
Jun 02, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
IMO, it seems most likely that they were warring societies (I know, shocking) and the females were the spoils. Or that they were extremely poor or were being consumed by a more dominant society and the females were surviving through prostitution. Frankly, I think one would expect the results they found, no?
napdaw
Jun 02, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Wow - talk about over generalizing! The headline is horrible. A few specimens doesn't equal the whole population - just gives us insight into some behaviours exhibited by some individuals. Thankfully the researchers get this!
Yellowdart
Jun 02, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Most of you have read Snuffy Smith right? Women leave the house to go gossip at the fence with other women ;)
Glyndwr
Jun 02, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Small hunting nomadic tribes were probably more egalitarian than we give them credit for...just look at the proto celtic tribes, women lead some tribes and that isnt even that old to us :D
KBK
Jun 05, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Don't tell me: The ladies were out humping and fighting until the wee hours.
Rank 4.3 /5 (7 votes)
Related Stories
Relevant PhysicsForums posts
  • Eye biology videos
    created4 hours ago
  • Flowering Plant Revived After 30,000 Years in Permafrost
    createdFeb 21, 2012
  • Toba volcano eruptions - 1.000 - 10,000 breeding pairsunb
    createdFeb 20, 2012
  • How is a specific gene removed from DNA
    createdFeb 20, 2012
  • Reproduction and Human evolution
    createdFeb 19, 2012
  • Viruses: Living or Non-living organisms
    createdFeb 19, 2012
  • More from Physics Forums - Biology

More news stories

Global influence of U.S. Constitution on the decline, study reveals

The U.S. Constitution's global influence is on the decline, finds a new study by David S. Law, JD, PhD, professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis.

Other Sciences / Economics & Business

created 18 hours ago | popularity 4.5 / 5 (2) | comments 8

Immigration chief seeks to reassure Silicon Valley

(AP) -- The Obama administration's top immigration official said Wednesday he wants to keep more foreign-born high-tech entrepreneurs in the U.S. But to make that happen, he said he needs those entrepreneurs to turn their ...

Other Sciences / Other

created 9 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (2) | comments 0

What is the value of a green card? Researcher calculates increase in income

Just what does it mean to get a green card? To some applicants, about $1,000 each month.

Other Sciences / Economics & Business

created 17 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 2

Increasingly, children's books are where the wild things aren't: study

Was your favorite childhood book crawling with wild animals and set in places like jungles or deep forests? Or did it take place inside a house or in a city, with few if any untamed creatures in sight?

Other Sciences / Social Sciences

created 11 hours ago | popularity 4.8 / 5 (4) | comments 0

Making the bones speak

In a narrow, modest laboratory in Michigan State University’s Giltner Hall, students pore over African skeletons from the Middle Ages in an effort to make the bones speak.

Other Sciences / Archaeology & Fossils

created 18 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0


Researchers build first physical 'metatronic' circuit

(PhysOrg.com) -- The technological world of the 21st century owes a tremendous amount to advances in electrical engineering, specifically, the ability to finely control the flow of electrical charges using ...

Spitzer finds solid buckyballs in space

(PhysOrg.com) -- Astronomers using data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope have, for the first time, discovered buckyballs in a solid form in space. Prior to this discovery, the microscopic carbon spheres ...

Faster than light neutrinos? More like faulty wiring

You can shelf your designs for a warp drive engine (for now) and put the DeLorean back in the garage; it turns out neutrinos may not have broken any cosmic speed limits after all.

Physicists surprised by disappearing and reappearing superconductivity in iron selenium chalcogenides

Superconductivity is a rare physical state in which matter is able to conduct electricity -- maintain a flow of electrons -- without any resistance. This phenomenon can only be found in certain materials at low temperatures, ...

Stanford research team cracks animated NuCaptcha

(PhysOrg.com) -- The research team from Stanford University, led by Elie Bursztein, that previously had cracked regular CAPTCHAs and then audio CAPTCHAs, now has also successfully cracked the animated version called NuCapt ...

Going up: Japan builder eyes space elevator

A Japanese construction firm claimed Wednesday it could execute an out-of-this-world plan to put tourists in space within 40 years by building an elevator that stretches a quarter of the way to the moon.