Themes > Science > Life Sciences > Physical Anthropology > Human Genetic Evolution > Early Archaic Homo sapiens and Their Contemporaries


The evolutionary dividing line between Homo erectus and modern humans was not sharp.  It extended over several hundred thousand years.  Adding to the confusion about this important transitional period is the fact that some regions were ahead of others in the process of evolving into our species.  The evolutionary changes above the neck that would lead to modern humans may have begun in Southern Europe and Northwest Africa by at least 600,000 years ago.  Elsewhere in the Old World, this change apparently began around 400,000 years ago.  The transition to our species, Homo sapiens, was not complete until around 100,000 years ago and even somewhat later in some regions. 

Archaic Homo sapiens

It is difficult to speak of our ancestors in terms of specific species during this long period of accelerated change from 600,000 to 100,000 years ago.  Some paleoanthropologists now classify the more biologically progressive post-600,000 B.P. populations in Europe and parts of Africa as a distinct species--Homo heidelbergensis.  By 300,000 years ago, some of these populations had begun the evolutionary transition that would end up with Neandertals and other peoples that have been collectively referred to as archaic Homo sapiens (shown as red in the diagram below).  By 100,000 B.P., some of the later archaic Homo sapiens had evolved into modern Homo sapiens.  Complicating the picture is the fact that, in at least one area of Southeast Asia, a few Homo erectus remained until around at least 60,000 years ago.

 

family tree of Archaic and modern Homo sapiens

Fossils of archaic Homo sapiens have been found throughout the Old World.  These widespread populations show regional variations in physical appearance.  The extent of the interaction between these diverse and widely distributed populations is not clear.  Likewise, there is not yet agreement as to which of these populations were the ancestors of modern humans.  However, it is apparent that in all regions, these people were anatomically a mosaic of late Homo erectus and modern human traits.

Important Early Archaic Homo sapiens Sites

Site Location Years Ago
(approximate)
Cranial Capacity
( in cm.3)




Africa: Lake Ndutu (near Olduvai Gorge)     400,000?  1100  
Broken Hill (Kabwe), Zambia 130,000+  1285  




China: Dali, Shaanxi Province 230-180,000    1120-1200    
Jinniushan, Liaoning Province 200,000   1260  




India: Narmada Valley, Central India 250,000? 1155-1421




Europe:   Terra Amata, France 400,000   -----  
Arago Cave, France 400-300,000? 1150  
Bilzingsleben, Germany 425-200,000  -----
Atapuerca, Spain 320-190,000  1125-1390  
Petralona Cave, Greece 300-200,000? 1190-1220  
Steinheim, Germany 300-250,000? 1100  
Swanscombe, England 300-250,000? 1325?
Ehringsdorf, Germany 245-190,000   1450
Vértesszöllös, Hungary 210-160,000? 1115-1434  


Information provided by: http://anthro.palomar.edu