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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
U.S. National Research Council calls for more exploration
Rosanne Skirble | Washington, DC 08 April 2010
Photo: Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
Rick Potts has led excavations1 at early human sites in the East African Rift2 Valley, and currently directs a multidisciplinary research team at the famous handaxe site of Olorgesailie, Kenya.
Related Links:
Journal Nature and DNA3 40,000 year old pinky bone
National Research Council Report
National Museum of Natural History Human Origins Exhibit
Andrew Hill, Yale University
Rick Potts tackles the mysteries of human origins for a living.
For over 25 years, the paleo-anthropologist at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington has led expeditions to East Africa to explore how our early ancestors adapted to changes in landscape and climate.
"You walk up a hillside of this eroded4 region of southern Kenya and you see layer after layer that indicates a huge lake was here, but then the lake is gone," says Potts. "Then there's a volcanic5 eruption6 that covered over all the grass. Animals had to move away. Then there's a river that came through that area. The lake is back and then there's a big drought, on and on, layer after layer — amazing chapters in this story of climate change."
Climate and evolution
Potts says prehistoric7 climate changes appear to have coincided with milestones8 in human evolution, such as the emergence9 of bipedalism — walking on two feet — the development of a larger brain and tool-making skills.
"What we were able to investigate is how those tool makers10, using stone hand-axes for hundreds of thousands of years were able to adjust. But then the environmental changes got ramped11 up, and the hand axes disappear, and we see the technologies that are smaller," he says. "We have stone points that were attached to arrows that allowed our direct ancestors, right before the emergence of our own species, to hunt animals and do many more diverse things."
Chip Clark, Smithsonian Institution
Multipurpose tools used to chop wood, butcher animals, and make other tools -- dominated early human technology for more than a million years.
Search for answers
That link between climate and human evolution is the subject of a new National Research Council study.
Andrew Hill is professor of anthropology12 at Yale University and part of the team of scientists that contributed to the report. He says efforts to better understand the link between climate and evolution — and to more clearly define those evolutionary13 adaptations — are limited by gaps in the fossil record.
"Any time you find something, it's likely that there's some before that you haven't found yet, and so you're not really dating the origin of these things precisely14," says Hill. "That gets better if you find more stuff. The bigger the size, the more likely you are to have an accurate first-appearance of a new behavior. And that's where we are deficient15 at the moment and why we need to explore more."
Climate and fossil records suggest that some events in human evolution coincided with substantial changes in African and Eurasian climate according to a new report published by the National Research Council.
Hill says the research team recommends a major new effort to locate additional sites. And he notes that remote-sensing devices aboard satellites and unmanned aircraft can help to more precisely target where to excavate17.
"You can actually search for different types of rock because different types of rock give off different types of signal in the non-visible part of the spectrum18. And so you can look for sedimentary rocks as opposed to volcanic rocks and different kinds of rocks like lake beds where there might be something plausible20."
Hill says the NRC report also recommends more extensive drilling to extract sediment19 cores from dry land, lake beds and ocean floors in regions where humans evolved. "In doing that you are also finding more specimens21 of other kinds of animals and archeology."
And, Hill adds, computer-generated climate models using data on temperature, precipitation and vegetation near human fossils can be a huge help not only in reconstructing past environments, but in understanding the science of climate change in our own era. "A very concrete way in which it's useful is that when you are working out models for what will happen in the future, the only way in which you can really test it, is by applying the models to the past where you know what really happened from other signals."
Family tree
Over at the Museum of Natural History in Washington Rick Potts is curator of a new exhibit on human origins.
He is also a contributor to the NRC report, which he says recommends new education programs to build on already-strong public interest in the science of human origins.
"The idea of being able to trace the emergence of our own species' resilience as the last remaining member of a diverse family tree, and how that evolutionary history interacts with the possibilities of the future, I think are extremely relevant, bringing together these two enormous areas of public curiosity, climate change and human evolution."
Potts says fossil and climate records can bring us a little closer to answering two fundamental questions: What does it mean to be human? And how will our resilient species adapt to a future of changing climate?
1 excavations | |
n.挖掘( excavation的名词复数 );开凿;开凿的洞穴(或山路等);(发掘出来的)古迹 | |
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2 rift | |
n.裂口,隙缝,切口;v.裂开,割开,渗入 | |
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3 DNA | |
(缩)deoxyribonucleic acid 脱氧核糖核酸 | |
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4 eroded | |
adj. 被侵蚀的,有蚀痕的 动词erode的过去式和过去分词形式 | |
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5 volcanic | |
adj.火山的;象火山的;由火山引起的 | |
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6 eruption | |
n.火山爆发;(战争等)爆发;(疾病等)发作 | |
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7 prehistoric | |
adj.(有记载的)历史以前的,史前的,古老的 | |
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8 milestones | |
n.重要事件( milestone的名词复数 );重要阶段;转折点;里程碑 | |
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9 emergence | |
n.浮现,显现,出现,(植物)突出体 | |
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10 makers | |
n.制造者,制造商(maker的复数形式) | |
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11 ramped | |
土堤斜坡( ramp的过去式和过去分词 ); 斜道; 斜路; (装车或上下飞机的)活动梯 | |
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12 anthropology | |
n.人类学 | |
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13 evolutionary | |
adj.进化的;演化的,演变的;[生]进化论的 | |
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14 precisely | |
adv.恰好,正好,精确地,细致地 | |
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15 deficient | |
adj.不足的,不充份的,有缺陷的 | |
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16 high-tech | |
adj.高科技的 | |
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17 excavate | |
vt.挖掘,挖出 | |
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18 spectrum | |
n.谱,光谱,频谱;范围,幅度,系列 | |
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19 sediment | |
n.沉淀,沉渣,沉积(物) | |
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20 plausible | |
adj.似真实的,似乎有理的,似乎可信的 | |
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21 specimens | |
n.样品( specimen的名词复数 );范例;(化验的)抽样;某种类型的人 | |
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