Embryogeny and Phylogeny of the Human Posture 2. Anne Dambricourt Malasse

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      John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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      © ISTE Ltd 2021

      The rights of Anne Dambricourt Malassé to be identified as the author of this work have been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2021938413

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-78630-729-3

      1

      The 20th Century. A New Science: Human Paleontology

      1.1. Introduction

      The 19th century saw the recognition of the animal and simian origin of Homo sapiens, although not without difficulty, through thought experiments due to the lack of sufficient knowledge in both paleontology and reproductive biology. The long geological periods throughout the history of the Earth and its cooling, as described by Georges Buffon, made it possible to locate fossil and current species according to lineages, or phylums, and then to link these phylums together by looking for “intermediate” fossil species. In this phylogeny of multicellular organisms, which became vertebrates with the horizontal organization of chordates, the primate lineage can be distinguished by the verticalization of the neuraxis starting from the posterior cranial base, the reduction of prognathism and an encephalization that led to Homo sapiens, the most verticalized chordate. Verticalization was the guiding thread of the problem, and the bimania (meaning two-hands in Latin) linked to this verticality was then much more significant for anthropologists, along with encephalization, then bipedalism, which was not original, being common in gibbons as well as birds. Whatever one’s opinion on the meaning of Man’s place in the animal kingdom and the history of the Earth, verticalized anatomy has not left the place assigned to it by the history of animals since Aristotle. It remains the last point on the curve of this complexification/verticalization, which was accompanied by an increase in cognitive capacities.

      A new prehistoric Homo sapiens skeleton was exhumed in 1872 on the lands of the Principality of Monaco, in Cavillon, in one of the Grimaldi caves. Everything pointed to a sepulchral context at levels as old as the Cro-Magnon shelter in Les Eyzies-de-Tayac (France), dating back nearly 30,000 years. The stakes were considerable because the remains carried a mantilla composed of more than 200 shells on its head, covered with red ochre and black hematite. The discovery attested to an already highly ritualized and symbolic relationship with death. The mastery of articulated language left little room for doubt. The excavations, however, did not have any means of guaranteeing its date. Prehistory was not yet a scientific discipline.

      Armand de Quatrefages studied the Les Eyzies skeletons with his naturalist assistant, the doctor Ernest Hamy (1842–1902). Together they defined the Cro-Magnon race as “the second fossilized human race”, the first being the “Canstadt race” or Neanderthal Man, which was limited to three specimens recognized as: Neanderthal, Gibraltar and La Naulette (see Volume 1). Their study was exocranial, the base of the skull was partially preserved on one of the three adult skulls, but its endocranial surface was not described because of its inaccessibility and there was no question of damaging the unique piece.

      New fossils of European Neanderthals enriched the collections in 1886, with three individuals discovered in Belgium in the Spy cave (currently dated at 38,500 years) and especially in Croatia in 1899 in the Krapina cave, with nearly 900 fragmented human remains, nearly 80 individuals dated at 125,000 years old. Traces of anthropophagy would be confirmed.

      Lyddeker was prospecting the Siwaliks and collecting numerous fossils of vertebrates preserved in the Museum of Calcutta. Among these fossils was a fragment of a monkey’s jawbone collected in 1879. Close to the gibbon, the geologist named it Paleopithecus sivalensis, then in 1886, he described a canine tooth which resembled that of an orangutan. It was the second fossil of a large anthropoid after the mandible of Dryopithecus. Henceforth, the Siwaliks became the cradle of the origin of Man. This perspective was in line with the deductions of Georges Cuvier who thought it was located somewhere in the Himalayan heights, based on paleoclimatic arguments linked to a rise in sea water on a planetary scale. For the high Himalayan peaks, global warming was to result in the melting of the glaciers and the consequent flooding of the plains by the powerful Himalayan rivers.

      1.2.1. The Java erect ape-man, or the missing link, Pithecanthropus

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