Pre-humans living in East Africa 4.4 million years ago inhabited savannas2(热带稀树草原) -- grassy3 plains dotted with(点缀,散布) trees and shrubs4(灌木) -- according to a team of researchers that includes earth science Naomi Levin of The Johns Hopkins University's Krieger School of Arts and Sciences. This conclusion is at odds(与……不和) with a theory – which holds that these early beings lived in a mostly forested environment – put forth5 by prominent(突出的,显著的) University of California at Berkeley researcher Tim D. White and his team in a 2009 issue of the journal Science.
"Our team examined the data published by White and his colleagues last October and found that their data does not support their conclusion that Ardipithecus ramidus(拉密达猿人) lived exclusively(专有地,唯一地) in woodlands and forest patches," said Levin, whose team published a commentary on the matter in today's issue of Science. "The White team's papers stress the wooded nature of A. ramidus's environment and say specifically that Ardi did not live in a savanna1. Yet, the actual data they present are consistent with exactly that: a savanna environment with a mix of grasses and trees."
This criticism is important because the claim that the 4.4 million-year-old fossil nicknamed "Ardi" lived in woodlands and forest patches was used as an argument against a longstanding theory of human evolution known as the "savanna hypothesis." According to that premise6(前提) , the expansion of savannas – grassy plains dotted with trees and shrubs – prompted our ape-like forebears(祖先) to descend7 from trees and begin walking upright(竖立,垂直) to find food more efficiently8, or to reach other trees for resources or shelter.
Levin, an assistant professor of earth and planetary sciences at Johns Hopkins, was part of a team of eight geologists9 and anthropologists from seven universities led by Thure E. Cerling of the University of Utah. They used the White team's own data to draw very different conclusion about the environment inhabited by Ardi, an omnivorous10(杂食的) , ape-like creature that stood about 4 feet tall and had a brain less than a quarter of the size of a modern day human's. This data was collected from ancient soils, plant fossils and other remains11 in the area now known as Aramis, in Ethiopia.
Levin's team found that tropical grasses, in fact, comprised between 40 and 60 percent of the biomass(生物量) in Ardi's world.
Levin says her team's conclusion is noteworthy(显著的) because, if scientists are to evaluate the environmental pressures that triggered the evolutionary12 success of some traits(特性) over others, they must clearly understand the environment itself.
"In their papers and summaries, White and his colleagues emphasize that A. ramidus had a mix of traits that suggest it was at ease both walking upright on the ground and moving through the trees on its palms," Levin explains. "If the habitat of A. ramidus was, in fact, a woodland with forest patches, where grasses were rare, then it's unlikely that the increased presence of grassy environments were the driving force behind the origin of upright walking in early human ancestors. However, if the habitat of A. ramidus included savannas where grasses were up to 60 percent of the available biomass, then we cannot rule out(排除,取消) the possibility that open environments played an important role in human origins and, in particular, in the origins of upright walking. The scientific community and the public should not accept an exclusively woodland/forested habitat for A. ramidus and the origins of upright walking, because the data do not support it."
The critique(批判) concludes that although its authors do not judge the validity(有效性,正确性) of the savanna hypothesis, the connection between human ancestors walking upright and the expansion of grasslands13 remains a viable14(可行的) idea.