Much of the early human fossil record originates from just a few places in Africa, where favorable geological conditions have preserved a trove of fossils used by scientists to reconstruct the story of human evolution.
One of these fossil hotspots is the eastern branch of the East African Rift System, home to important sites such as Oldupai Gorge in Tanzania. Yet, the eastern branch of the rift system only accounts for 1% of the surface area of Africa—a fact that makes it possible to estimate how much information scientists who rely on such small samples are missing.
In a new study published in the journal “Nature Ecology and Evolution,” George Washington University researchers revealed the extent to which the concentration of sites in hotspots like the East African Rift System biases our understanding of human evolution and why scientists must take that bias into account when interpreting early human history.
“Because the evidence of early human evolution comes from a small range of sites, it’s important to acknowledge that we don’t have a complete picture of what happened across the entire continent,” said W. Andrew Barr, an assistant professor of anthropology at GW’s Columbian College of Arts and Sciences (CCAS) and the study’s lead author. “If we can point to the ways in which the fossil record is systematically biased and not a perfect representation of everything, then we can adjust our interpretations by taking this into account.”
To determine the size of the bias in the fossil record, Barr and his co-author Bernard Wood, CCAS University Professor of Human Origins, looked at the distribution of modern mammals living in the rift valley. They found that very few medium- and large-bodied mammals are “rift specialists,” and the rift environment, in fact, represents on average 1.6 % of the total geographic range of modern mammal species.
In a second analysis, Barr and Wood looked at how the skulls of modern primates collected in the rift valley compared with the skulls of the same primates from other parts of the continent. They found that skulls from the rift valley represented less than 50% of the total variation among primate skulls in Africa.
While the science community has long recognized that the rift represents just a small sample of where ancient humans likely lived, the researchers said that previous studies have not used modern mammals as analogs for human fossils to try to quantify the magnitude of the bias.
Information from modern mammals can’t tell us exactly where else, and in what type of environments, our human ancestors lived, the authors emphasized. But it can provide clues that help us better understand the environments and physical differences of ancient humans.
“We must avoid falling into the trap of coming up with what looks like a comprehensive reconstruction of the human story, when we know we don’t have all of the relevant evidence,” Wood said. “Imagine trying to capture the social and economic complexity of Washington, D.C., if you only had access to information from one neighborhood. It helps if you can get a sense of how much information is missing.”
The researchers also noted the need for the scientific community to look beyond the rift to identify new fossil sites and expand the geographic range of the fossil record.
“There’s a smaller number of people who work outside these traditional hotspots and do the thankless labor of trying to find fossils in these contexts that are really hard to work in, where the geology isn’t favorable for finding fossils,” said Barr, whose own work involves looking for fossils beyond the hotspots. “It’s worth doing that sort of work to make our picture of mammal and human evolution from this time period more complete.”