hominin: References & Edit History
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Assorted References
- apes
- In ape
- Hominidae
- In Hominidae
- In Ardipithecus
- Homo sapiens
- In Homo sapiens
human evolution
- Quaternary
Researcher's Note
Changes to hominid classification
The taxonomy of primates, specifically those with close affinities to human beings (Homo sapiens) in Superfamily Hominoidea, remains in flux as new species are discovered and their connections with known species are described. As a result, the taxonomic arrangement within Hominoidea continues to be debated among biologists, primatologists, and paleontologists.
Before the onset of DNA analysis in the early 2000s, the placement of different species within the various kingdoms of life had been done by describing their unique morphological or physical characteristics and comparing these characteristics with those of other species. During this period, humans and their close living relatives within Hominoidea were divided into families as follows: Family Hominidae (humans and their ancestors), Family Pongidae (gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans), and Family Hylobatidae (gibbons and lesser apes).
When the tools of DNA sequencing and analysis became available and were applied to primate classification, the traditional structure was modified to follow the genetic affinities between the species. The new ranks of tribe and subtribe were added to the hierarchy between the subfamily and genus levels with the goal of better representing the close genetic similarities between humans, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), and gorillas (Gorilla). Hominidae was divided into two subfamilies (Homininae and Ponginae). Ponginae contained orangutans and their ancestors, whereas Homininae contained two tribes: Tribe Gorillini (which contained gorillas and their ancestors) and Tribe Hominini (which was made up of Subtribe Hominina [humans and their direct ancestors in the genera Homo, Australopithecus, and Ardipithecus] and Subtribe Panina [chimpanzees, bonobos, and their ancestors]). This modified classification became widely accepted among biologists.
In practical terms, species are the primary units of biological classification, and critics of the modified classification argue that families, subfamilies, and other ranks outside of the species can be arbitrary as long as they maintain basic phylogenetic relationships. Critics of the modified classification, such as American paleoanthropologist Tim D. White (author of Britannica’s article on Ardipithecus), emphasize the uniqueness of members of the human lineage (the genera Ardipithecus, Australopithecus, and Homo) with respect to increases in brain size, advanced tool use, and capabilities for imagination. They prefer that the term hominid be limited strictly to members of the Family Hominidae and their direct ancestors and that gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos, and orangutans be excluded from Hominidae.
To remedy these issues, these researchers proposed an alternative arrangement that places orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and members of the human lineage into their own individual families—Family Pongidae, Family Gorillidae, Family Panidae, and Family Hominidae, respectively. While not perfect, these critics claim that such a classification would be a cleaner alternative, which would offer more flexibility than a structure that attempts to describe the exact relationships between species based on current knowledge alone.
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Article History
Type | Description | Contributor | Date |
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Add new Web site: The Royal Society Publishing - Royal Society Open Science - Long-term patterns of body mass and stature evolution within the hominin lineage. | Oct 08, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: BMC - Evolution: Education and Outreach - The First Hominins and the Origins of Bipedalism. | Aug 28, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: PNAS - The evolution of early hominin food production and sharing. | Jul 17, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: CiteSeerX - Hominin life history: reconstruction and evolution. | Jun 07, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: Palomar College - Early Hominin Evolution: A Survey of the Australopithecines and Related Genera. | Apr 25, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: Social Sciences LibreTexts - What is a Hominin? | Mar 01, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: Australian Museum - Hominid and hominin whats the difference? | Feb 27, 2024 | ||
Add new Web site: Science Learning Hub - Becoming human hominins. | Oct 26, 2023 | ||
Add new Web site: Milne Publishing - What is a Hominin. | Sep 12, 2023 | ||
Add new Web site: The University of Hawaiʻi Pressbooks - Early Hominins. | Jul 21, 2023 | ||
Add new Web site: PNAS - Evolution and function of the hominin forefoot. | Jun 09, 2023 | ||
Add new Web site: Nature - Overview of Hominin Evolution. | Feb 16, 2023 | ||
Article revised and updated. | Apr 08, 2021 | ||
Add new Web site: National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - The hominin fossil record: taxa, grades and clades. | May 02, 2013 | ||
Added diagram depicting evolutionary divergence of humans and apes. | May 04, 2010 | ||
New article added. | Apr 22, 2009 |