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Review Article

Diagnosing Homo sapiens in the fossil record

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Pages 312-322 | Received 30 Apr 2014, Accepted 01 May 2014, Published online: 16 Jun 2014
 

Abstract

Background: 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.

Methods and results: 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.

Conclusion: 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.

Acknowledgements

CS would like to thank Sarah Elton and Kevin Kuykendall for inviting him to participate in the SSHB conference in Durham. Both authors would like to thank Ros Fleming, Jon Buck and two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and the Human Origins Research Fund of the Natural History Museum, London and The Calleva Foundation for funding.

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