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An analysis of a 1.5 million-year-old vertebra from a human relative living in what is now Israel suggests that ancient humans dispersed out of Africa is multiple waves.
Transcript
00:00There is a continuous debate about the nature of out-of-Africa migration.
00:05Was this a one-time event or did it take place on multiple occasions?
00:17The site of Ubediah is found close to the southern edge of the Sea of Galilee,
00:22near Kibbutz Beit Zera, and is one of the earliest prehistoric sites to be found outside of Africa
00:27and dates to around 1.5 million years ago. The only other site that predates Ubediah is the Manisi
00:34in the Republic of Georgia, which dates to around 1.8 million years ago.
00:41Ubediah was discovered and excavated in the early 60s by many of the famous Israeli pre-historians
00:48who uncovered rich stone tools assemblages that were used by early humans, together with numerous
00:54animal bones, some of which went extinct long time ago, like saber-toothed cats and mammoths,
00:59while others are not usually associated with Israel, such as hippos, rhinos, and big crocodiles.
01:07In 2018, Miriam Bellmaker won a National Science Foundation grant to study the ancient climate
01:13and to accurately date the site. While studying animal bones from the site, she came across a
01:19vertebra with a human-like feature that was actually excavated in 1966. Together with Professor El-Abbin,
01:26we studied the vertebra and came up with some new and important conclusions. First, it is a fossilized
01:34early human bone that belonged to a child. We know so because of the shape of the vertebra and the fact
01:41that it is incomplete, meaning that it did not finish its growing process. We estimate that had it reach
01:48adulthood. This individual would be around 1.8 meters tall and weigh about 19 kilograms. These numbers are
01:56similar to some of the large-bodied hominins that are found in Africa in the similar time period,
02:05but are very different from the small-bodied hominins that we found in Georgia. Second,
02:11he will witness two distinct human species at the same time period, which is known as the lower
02:17Pleistocene for Pleistocene outside of Africa. We know that the earliest stages of human evolution
02:23took place in Africa based on the fossil record and by comparing DNA data from apes and humans.
02:31However, over the years, there is a continuous debate about the nature of out-of-Africa migration.
02:38Was this a one-time event or did it take place on multiple occasions? And who were the people who
02:44migrated out of Africa? Our current study indicates that early hominins migrated at least twice and in
02:52two distinct ways. This is because the people of Dmanisi are different in size and shape from those
02:59in Ubadia. Moreover, Dr. Omri Barzilai studied the stone artifacts from both sides,
03:05concluded that the stone manufacturing techniques, as well as the stone tools themselves,
03:11are different. Professor Miriam Bellmaker concludes that the climate, as well as the animals, are also
03:18different in both sides. Thus, with each migration waves came new and different types of hominins,
03:26with their own stone-making traditions, which may indicate maybe about their cognitive abilities
03:33and the different preferences of their ecological niche and habitat. Thank you for listening and have a great day!

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