Wolpoff, M.H., Hawks, J., Senut, B., Pickford, M. & Ahern, J. (2006). An Ape or
the Ape: Is the Toumai Cranium TM 266 a Hominid?
PaleoAnthropology 2006: 36-50.
ABSTRACT
The Toumaļ cranium TM 266 is the first known from any Late Miocene African hominoid clade, and is one of the best preserved crania of any Miocene hominoid. Since its publication there has been debate in the scientific literature and discussion in the popular press over the assertion that this cranium is significant because it is the
earliest known hominid1. The basis of the hominid assessment rests on two interpretations of the anatomy: a hominid-like, small, flat-wearing canine; and, cranial features reflecting an upright stance and bipedal locomotion. In fact, it is widely reported that the specimen is an upright hominid biped (Haile-Selassie et al., 2004; Kimbel, 2004; Lieberman, 2002), although this is yet to be verified by independent observations and study. The history of paleoanthropology may be relevant to this assessment, because there have been similar claims for other extinct primate
species. Here, we evaluate the hypothesis that Sahelanthropus (the genus TM 266 is attributed to) is a hominid by examining features of the canine and of the cranial base that are said to reflect canine reduction and change of function, and upright posture and bipedal locomotion. These are hominid autapomorphies and their presence or
absence in late Miocene hominoids has fundamental importance for identifying the hominid clade.
The paper concludes:
"TM 266 is a young specimen of indeterminate sex. Its canines are large for a Miocene ape female and small for a Miocene ape male, in absolute and relative dimensions. Canine wear is apical and transversely distal, a condition found in many other Miocene ape specimens, but it is possible that the TM 266 canine is more heavily worn than most other Miocene canines of similar dental age. Unlike Australopithecines, the evidence indicates that TM 266 did not habitually hold its head in an upright position over the spine and thus lacked this significant obligate bipedal adaptation. By itself this contrasts with all known hominids, and even in the absence of postcranial remains this anatomy is sufficient to exclude Sahelanthropus from the hominid clade as we understand it, an exclusion compatible with genetic estimates of the chimpanzee/hominid divergence. It is this exclusion, and not any combination of synapomorphies, which demonstrates that TM 266 was an ape" (Wolpoff et al. 2006:48)
This question was raised previously, a few years ago:
Wolpoff, M.H., B. Senut, M. Pickford & J. Hawks (2002).
Sahelanthropus or
'Sahelpithecus'?
Nature 419: 581-582.
But the paper in
Nature is only two short pages, while this new paper (with references) is a much more comprehensive 15 pages. The paper (Wolpoff
et al. 2006) is available free (as are all papers from
PaleoAnthropology) in pdf . Instructions on how to reach the free pdf download as well as further comment from a co-author can be found on John Hawks' weblog, at:
CLICK HERE.
Dar