As well as providing new insight into the evolution of chimps, the landmark
discovery shatters the widespread belief that humans and chimps did not
coexist since they diverged from a common ancestor five to eight million
years ago.
The researchers found startling evidence of the cohabitation as they
unearthed fossils attributed to Homo erectus or Homo rhodesiensis in the
same geologic layer less than a mile away.
Since modern chimp populations are now confined to wooded west and
central Africa, whereas most hominid fossils have been found in the
semi-arid East African Rift Valley, it has been long speculated that
ancient chimps and humans diverged from their common ancestor when hominids
left the jungles and moved east to the less wooded grasslands.
"People used to believe that the origin of humans had to do with their
leaving the forest and beginning to walk on two legs. Our discovery shows
that the forest-savanna dichotomy used to explain the split between the
chimpanzee and human lines does not add up," McBrearty, who discovered the
fossils, told Discovery News.
McBrearty and Jablonski also found fossilized remains of fish,
hippopotami, crocodiles, turtles, gastropods and other moisture-loving
animals.
The remains would suggest that 500,000 years ago that chimps and
ancient Homo inhabited a wet, wooded area surrounding a lake.
"The environment of the Rift Valley was more diverse than people tend to
think ... . It was a bit more wooded than at present, and there were a number of
animal species there that are not there now. Humans have had a big impact
on the vegetation and the other animals in the last 100 to 1,000 years,"
McBrearty said.