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The species in paleoanthropology

Ian TATTERSALL

en Comptes Rendus Palevol 23 (27) - Pages 433-440

Published on 20 November 2024

This article is a part of the thematic issue Lucy’s Heirs – Tribute to Yves Coppens

The species is the basic unit of analysis in systematic paleontology. Yet, for most of its history the subfield of paleoanthropology has lacked any coherent concept of what fossil species are, using the species epithet variously at different times – most recently, with the conspicuous effect of minimizing apparent diversity among the hominins. The application of molecular systematic techniques to the analysis of high-latitude early Homo sapiens Linnaeus, 1758 and its contemporaries thus offers a welcome opportunity to reappraise our approaches to species recognition in the rapidly expanding hominin fossil record. But it must be cautioned that evidence for hybridization among documented or hypothesized lineages cannot necessarily be taken as evidence for recoalescence among them, and that “braided stream” models of hominin evolution (which militate against speciation) cannot ­account for the diversity of historically and morphologically differentiated entities we see in that record.


Keywords:

Species, paleoanthropology, evolution, hominins, molecular systematics, speciation, braided evolution

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