Digging for humanitys origins Louise Leakey

who are we that is the big question

and essentially we are just an upright

walking big brain super intelligent ape

this could be us we belong to the family

called the humanity we are the species

called Homo sapiens sapiens and it’s

important to remember that and in terms

of our place in the world today and our

future and planet Earth

we are one species of about five and a

half thousand mammalian species that

exist on planet Earth today and that’s

just a tiny fraction of all species that

have ever lived on the planet in past

times we’re one species out of

approximately one let’s say at least

sixteen upright-walking apes that have

existed over the past six to eight

million years but as far as we know

we’re the only upright-walking ape that

exists on planet Earth today except for

the bonobos and it’s important to

remember that because the bonobos are so

human and they share 99% of their genes

with us and we share our origins with a

handful of the living great apes it’s

important to remember that we evolved

now I know that’s a dirty word for some

people but we evolved from common

ancestors with the gorillas the

chimpanzee and also the bonobos we have

a common past and we have a common

future and it is important to remember

that all of these great apes have come

on as long and as an interesting

evolutionary journey as we ourselves

have today and it’s this journey that is

of such interest to humanity and it’s

this journey that has been the focus of

the past three generations of my family

as we’ve been in East Africa looking for

the fossil remains of our ancestors to

try and piece

together our evolutionary past and this

is how we look for them a group of

dedicated young men and women walk very

slowly off across vast areas of Africa

looking for small fragments of bone

fossil bone that may be on the surface

and that’s an example of what we may do

as we walk across the landscape in

northern Kenya looking for fossils I

thought many of you in the audience can

see the fossil that’s in this picture

but if you look very carefully there is

a jaw no a jaw of a 4.1 million year old

upright walking ape as it was found at

Lake Turkana on the west side it’s

extremely time consuming labor-intensive

and it is something that it’s going to

involve a lot more people to begin to

piece together our paths we still really

haven’t got a very complete picture of

it when we find a fossil we market today

we’ve got great technology we have GPS

we mark it with a GPS fix and we also

take a digital photograph of the

specimen so we could essentially put it

back on the surface exactly where we

found it and we can bring all this

information into big GIS packages today

when we then find something very

important like the bones of a human

ancestor we begin to excavate it

extremely carefully and slowly using

dental picks and fine paintbrushes and

all the sediment is then put through

these screens and where we go again

through it very carefully looking for

small bone fragments and it’s been

washed and these things are so exciting

they are so often the only or the very

first time that anybody has ever seen

the remains and here is a very special

moment when my mother and myself were

digging up and some remains of human

human ancestors and it isn’t one of the

most special things to ever do with your

mother

cannot many people look and say that but

now let me take you back to Africa two

million years ago I just like to point

out if you look at the map of Africa it

does actually look like a hominid skull

in its shape now we’re going to go to

the East African and the Rift Valley

essentially runs up from the Gulf of

Aden or runs down to Lake Malawi and the

Rift Valley is a depression it’s a basin

and rivers flowed down from the

highlands into the basin carrying

sediment preserving the bones of animals

that live there if you want to become a

fossil you actually need to die

somewhere where your bones will be

rapidly buried you then hope that the

earth moves in such a way as to bring

the bones back up to the surface and

then you hope that one of us lot will

walk around and find small pieces of you

okay so it is absolutely surprising that

we know as much as we do know today

about our ancestors because it’s

incredibly difficult eh for these things

to become to be preserved and secondly

for them to have been brought back up to

the surface and we really have only

spent fifty years looking for these

remains and begin to actually piece

together our evolutionary story so

that’s good too Lake Turkana which is

one such Lake basin in the very north of

our country Kenya and if you look north

here there’s a big river that flows into

the lake that’s been carrying sediment

and preserving the remains of the

animals that live there fossil sites run

up and down both lengths of that lake

basin which represents some twenty

thousand square miles that’s a huge job

that we’ve got on our hands two million

years ago at Lake Turkana Homo erectus

one of our human ancestors actually

lived in this region you can see some of

the major fossil sites that we’ve been

working in the north but essentially

two million years ago Homo erectus up in

the far right corner lived alongside

three other species of human ancestor

and here is a skull of a homo erectus

which have just pulled off the shelf

there but it is not to say that being a

single species on planet Earth is the

norm in fact if you go back in time it

is the norm that there are multiple

species of hominids of human ancestors

that coexist at any one time where did

these things come from that’s what we’re

still trying to find answers to and it

is important to realize that there is

diversity in all different species and

our ancestors are no exception there’s

some reconstructions of some of the

fossils that have been found from Lake

Turkana but I was very lucky to have

been brought up in Kenya essentially

accompanying my parents to Lake Turkana

in search of human remains and we were

able to dig up when we got old enough

fossils such as this a slender snouted

crocodile and we dug up giant tortoises

and elephants and things like that but

when I was 12 as I was in this picture a

very exciting expedition was in place on

the west side when they found

essentially the skeleton of this Homo

erectus I could relate to this Homo

erectus skeleton very well because I was

the same age that he was when he died

and I imagined him to be tall dark

skinned his brother certainly were able

to run long distances chasing prey

probably sweating heavily as they did so

he was very able to use stones

effectively as tools and this individual

himself this one that I’m holding up

here actually had a bad back he probably

had an injury as a child he

the scoliosis and therefore must have

been looked after quite carefully by

other female and probably much smaller

members of his family group to have got

to where he did in life age 12

unfortunately for him he fell into a

swamp and was and couldn’t get out

essentially his bones were rapidly

buried and beautifully preserved and he

remained there until 1.6 million years

later when this very famous fossil

hunter Camille Camille walked along a

small hillside and found that small

piece of his skull lying on the surface

amongst the pebbles recognized it as as

being hominid it it’s actually this

little piece up here on the top well an

excavation was begun immediately and

more and more little bits of skull

started to be extracted from the

sediment and what was so fun about it

was the skull pieces got closer and

closer to the roots of the tree and

fairly recently the tree had grown up

but it had found that the skull had

captured nice water in the hillside and

so it had decided to grow its roots in

and around this holding it in place and

preventing it from washing away down the

slope we began to find limb bones we

found finger bones the bones of the

pelvis vertebrae ribs collarbones things

that had never ever been seen before and

in Homo erectus

it was truly exciting he had a body very

similar to our own and he was on the

threshold of becoming human

well it’s shortly afterwards members of

his species started to move northwards

out of Africa and you start to see

fossils of Homo erectus in Georgia and

China and also in parts of Indonesia so

Homo erectus was the first human

ancestor to leave Africa and begin its

spread across the globe

some exciting finds again as I mentioned

from Dmanisi in the Republic of Georgia

but also surprising finds from recently

announced from the island of Flores in

Indonesia where a group of these human

ancestors have been isolated and have

become dwarfed and they’re only about a

metre in height but they lived only

18,000 years ago and that is truly

extraordinary to think about just to put

this in terms of generations because

people do find it hard to think of time

Homo erectus left Africa 90,000

generations ago we evolved essentially

from an African stock again at about

200,000 years as a fully fledged us and

we only left Africa about 70,000 years

ago and until 30,000 years ago at least

three upright-walking its shared the

planet earth the question now is for who

who are we were certainly a polluting

wasteful aggressive species with a few

nice things thrown in perhaps for the

most part but you’re not particularly

pleasant at all we have a much larger

brain than our ape ancestors is this a

good evolutionary adaptation or is it

going to lead us to being the shortest

lived hominid species on planet earth

and what is it that really makes us us I

think it’s our collective intelligence

it’s our ability to write things down

our language and our consciousness from

very primitive beginnings with a very

crude toolkit of stones we now have a

very advanced toolkit and our tool use

has really reached unprecedented levels

we’ve got buggies to Mars we’ve mapped

the human genome and recently even

created synthetic life thanks to craig

Venter and we’ve also managed to

communicate with people all over the

world from extraordinary places even

from within an excavation in northern

Kenya we can talk to people

about what we’re doing as albor so

clearly has reminded us we have reached

extraordinary numbers of people on this

planet human ancestors really only

survive on planet Earth if you look at

the the fossil record for about on

average a million years at a time we’ve

only been around for the past 200

thousand years as a species yet we’ve

reached a population of more than six

and a half billion people and last year

our population grew by 80 million I mean

these are extraordinary numbers you can

see here again taken from Al Gore’s book

but what’s happened is our technology

has removed the checks and balances on

our population growth we have to control

our numbers and I think this is as

important as anything else that’s being

done in the world today but we have to

control our numbers because we can’t

really hold it together as a species my

father so appropriately put it that we

are certainly the only animal that makes

conscious choices that are bad for our

survival as a species can we hold it

together it’s important to remember that

we all evolved in Africa we all have an

African origin we have a common past and

we share a common future evolutionary

speaking we’re just a blip we’re sitting

on the edge of a precipice we have the

tools and the technology at our hands to

communicate what needs to be done to

hold it together today we could tell

every single human being out there if we

really wanted to but will we do that or

will we just let nature take its course

well to end on a very positive note I

think evolutionary speaking this is

probably a fairly good thing in the end

I’ll leave it at that thank you very

much

you

我们是谁,这是个大问题

,本质上我们只是一个直立

行走的大脑超级智能猿,

这可能是我们我们属于人类这个家庭

我们是一个

叫做智人的物种,

重要的是要记住这一点,并且用术语

我们在当今世界和未来以及地球上的地位,我们是当今

地球上

存在的

大约五千种哺乳动物中的一个物种,

而这

只是过去曾经生活在地球上的所有物种中的一小部分

有时我们是大约一个物种中的

一个,假设在过去六到八百万年中至少

存在十六种直立行走的猿类,

但据我们所知,

我们是地球上唯一存在的直立行走的猿类

今天除了

倭黑猩猩,重要的是要

记住,因为倭黑猩猩是如此

人类,它们与我们共享 99% 的基因

,我们与少数活着的类人猿共享我们的起源

重要的是要记住

我们现在进化

了 所有这些类人猿都

像我们今天一样经历

了漫长而有趣的进化

之旅

我们一直在东非寻找

我们祖先的化石遗骸,试图

拼凑我们的进化历史,这

就是我们寻找他们的方式一群

敬业的年轻男女非常

缓慢地穿过非洲广阔的地区

寻找

可能在表面上的骨头化石骨头的小碎片,

是我们在

肯尼亚北部寻找化石时可能会做的一个

例子 观众中的许多人都可以

看到这张照片中的化石,

但如果你仔细观察,你会

发现它是在西侧的图尔卡纳湖发现的 410 万年前直立行走猿的下巴,它

非常 耗时

劳动密集型 需要更多的人才能开始

拼凑我们的道路

当我们找到今天销售的化石时,我们仍然没有完全了解它

伟大的技术 我们有 GPS

我们用 GPS 定位标记它,我们还

拍摄了标本的数码照片,

这样我们基本上可以把它

放回我们发现它的表面上

,今天我们可以将所有这些

信息放入大型 GIS 包

中 然后我们发现一些非常

重要的东西,比如人类祖先的骨头,

我们开始

非常小心地慢慢地用

牙签和细画笔挖掘它,

然后所有的沉积物都通过

这些屏幕,然后我们去哪里

非常仔细地寻找

小的骨头碎片,它已经被

清洗了,这些东西是如此令人兴奋,

它们往往是唯一或

第一次有人见过

这些遗骸,这是一个非常特别的

时刻,我和我的母亲 正在

挖掘一些

人类祖先的遗骸,这不是

与你母亲做过的最特别的事情之一,

很多人不会看到和说,但

现在让我带你回到两

百万年前的非洲,我只是喜欢

指出如果你看一下非洲地图,

它的形状实际上看起来像一个原始人的

头骨现在我们

要去东非,裂谷

基本上从

亚丁湾向上延伸或向下延伸到湖 马拉维和

裂谷是一个洼地,它是一个盆地

,河流从

高地流入盆地,携带

沉积物,保存在那里生活的动物的骨头,

如果你想成为

化石,你实际上需要

死掉一些 在这里你的骨头将被

迅速埋葬你然后希望

地球以这样一种方式移动

骨头回到表面

然后你希望我们中的一个人会

四处走动找到你的小块

好吧所以它 绝对令人惊讶的是,

我们对祖先的了解与今天一样多,

因为要保存

这些东西非常困难

,其次

要让它们

重新浮出水面,而我们真的只

花了 50 年 寻找这些

遗骸,开始真正

拼凑我们的进化故事,这样

也很好,图尔卡纳湖是

我们国家肯尼亚最北部的一个这样的湖盆地,如果你向北看,

这里有一条大河

流入湖中 携带沉积物

并保存

生活在那里的动物的遗骸 化石遗址在代表约两万平方英里的

湖盆的两个长度上来回奔跑,

那是啊

200 万

年前,我们在图尔卡纳湖的直立

人获得了一份伟大的工作 我们的人类祖先之一实际上

生活在这个地区,你可以

看到我们一直在北部工作的一些主要化石遗址,

但基本上有

两个 百万年前

,最右边的直立人与

其他三种人类祖先生活在一起

,这里有一个直立人的头骨,

刚刚从那里下架

,但这并不是说它是

地球上的单一物种

事实上,如果你回到过去,这

是常态,

人类祖先的多种原始人

在任何时候共存是常态,

这些东西是从哪里来的,这就是我们

仍在努力寻找答案的原因

重要的是要意识到

所有不同物种都有多样性,

我们的祖先也不例外

,有一些从图尔卡纳湖发现的化石的重建,

但我很幸运

能够 在肯尼亚长大,基本上

和父母一起去图尔卡纳湖

寻找人类遗骸,

当我们得到足够古老的化石时,我们能够挖掘出来,

比如一条细长的

吻鳄鱼,我们挖出巨大的乌龟

和大象之类的东西,但是

当 我当时 12 岁,因为我在这张照片

中,在西侧进行了一次非常激动人心的探险,

当时他们基本上发现

了这个直立人的骨骼

他死了

,我想象他身材高大,

皮肤黝黑,他的兄弟当然

能够跑很远的距离追逐猎物,

可能像他们那样大汗淋漓,所以

他非常能够有效地使用石头

作为工具,而

这个人本人就是我拿着的那个 在

这里实际上有一个糟糕的背部他可能

在小时候受伤了他

的脊柱侧弯,因此必须

由其他女性非常小心地照顾

而且可能要小得多

不幸的是,他的家庭成员到达了他 12 岁时做过的地方,不幸的是,他掉进了

沼泽中,并且无法离开,

基本上他的骨头被迅速

掩埋并保存完好,他

一直呆在那里直到 160 万年

后 当这位非常有名的化石

猎人卡米尔卡米尔沿着一个

小山坡走时,发现

他的一小块头骨躺在鹅卵石之间的表面上

,认出它

是原始人,它实际上

是顶部井上的这块小块,

挖掘工作开始了 很快,

越来越多的小块头骨

开始从沉积物中提取出来,

有趣的

是,头骨碎片越来越

靠近树的根部,

最近这棵树长大了,

但它发现 头骨

在山坡上捕捉到了很好的水,

所以它决定在它的内部和周围生长它的根,

将它固定在适当的位置,

防止它从山坡上

冲走 洛普 我们开始发现四肢骨 我们

发现了指骨

骨盆椎骨 肋骨 锁骨

以前从未见过的东西

在直立

人中 真的很令人兴奋

不久之后,

他的物种成员开始向北

迁出非洲,您开始

在格鲁吉亚和

中国以及印度尼西亚的部分地区看到直立人的化石,因此

直立人是第一个

离开非洲并开始的人类祖先

正如我在格鲁吉亚共和国的德马尼西提到的那样,它再次在全球传播了一些令人兴奋的发现

但最近在印度尼西亚弗洛雷斯岛宣布的令人惊讶的发现也有一些令人惊讶的发现,

那里的一群人类

祖先已经被孤立并

变得相形见绌,他们' 身高只有一

米左右,但他们只生活在

18,000 年前

因为

人们确实很难想象

直立人离开非洲的时间 90,000

代前我们基本上是

从非洲种群进化而来的,大约在

200,000 年前,作为一个完全成熟的我们,

我们仅在大约 70,000 年前离开非洲

,直到 30,000 年前 至少

三个直立行走它共享

地球现在的问题

是我们是谁,我们肯定是一个污染性

浪费的侵略性物种,

可能大部分时间都被扔进了一些好东西,

但你一点也不特别

愉快我们有一个

大脑比我们的猿祖先大得多,这是一种

很好的进化适应,还是它

会导致我们成为

地球上寿命最短的原始人物种

?是什么真正造就了我们?我

认为这是我们的集体智慧

,是我们的写作能力

我们的语言和意识从

非常原始的开始就使用非常

粗糙的石头工具包我们现在拥有

非常先进的工具包和我们的工具

使用确实达到了前所未有的水平

我们已经将越野车带到了火星 我们绘制

了人类基因组图,最近甚至

通过 craig Venter 创造了合成生命

我们还设法

从非凡的地方甚至从内部与世界各地的人们进行交流

在肯尼亚北部的一次挖掘中,

我们可以与人们

谈论我们作为 albor 正在做的事情,如此

清楚地提醒我们,我们已经

在这个星球上接触到了非常多的人,

如果你查看化石记录,人类祖先真的只能在地球上生存

平均大约一百万年 我们

作为一个物种仅存在了过去 20 万年,但我们

的人口已经超过 65

亿人,去年

我们的人口增长了 8000 万 意味着

这些是非凡的数字,您可以

再次从戈尔的书中看到,

但发生的事情是我们的技术

已经消除了

我们对人口增长的制衡 控制

我们的数量,我认为这与当今世界

上正在做的任何其他事情一样重要,

但我们必须

控制我们的数量,因为我们不能

真正将它作为一个物种保持在一起,我

父亲如此恰当地把它说成

我们肯定是 唯一做出

有意识的选择对我们

作为一个物种的生存不利的动物我们可以将它保持

在一起重要的是要记住

我们都在非洲进化我们都有

非洲血统我们有共同的过去和

我们共同的未来

进化论 我们只是昙花一现 我们正坐在

悬崖边上

我们手头有工具和技术来

交流需要做些什么才能

将它团结在一起 今天我们可以告诉

每个人如果我们

真的 想要但我们会这样做

还是让大自然顺其自然

以非常积极的方式结束我

认为从进化论上讲这

最终可能是一件相当好的事情

我会把它留在那个谢谢 你非常