Human taxonomy
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Human taxonomy is how scientists group and name humans and their ancient relatives. It helps us learn where we come from and how we are related to other living things. The human species belongs to a group called the genus Homo. This group includes people today and older kinds of humans who no longer exist. Today, people are called Homo sapiens, but there were other types like Homo sapiens idaltu, who may have been direct ancestors.
For a long time, scientists have studied how humans evolved. They have found many different kinds of ancient humans and tried to organize them into groups. Most agree that the genus Homo began between two and three million years ago. It includes at least two main kinds: archaic Homo erectus and modern Homo sapiens. Scientists are still learning more and sometimes suggest new groups.
Humans are part of a larger group called the tribe Hominini, which also includes chimpanzees. Experts think humans and chimpanzees shared a common ancestor and then separated over a very long time, starting about 10 million years ago and finishing around 6 million years ago. Some scientists also talk about a group called Australopithecina, which may include very old “pre-human” types that lived before the split between humans and chimpanzees.
Sorting humans by how they look has been a tricky topic. In the past, biologists used to group people into different subspecies based on race, but today most experts think this is not useful. They see all humans as part of one big, connected family with many mixtures of genes. The way scientists classify ancient humans is still changing as we learn more.
History
Further information: History of hominoid taxonomy, Hominini, Anthropomorpha, and Pithecanthropus
Human taxonomy is about how humans fit among the great apes and how we group different kinds of humans. The system we use today started with Carl Linnaeus in the 1700s. He was the first to suggest that people could be grouped like other living things. He named our species Homo sapiens in 1758.
In the 1800s, scientists found fossils of other human-like species, such as Homo neanderthalensis. Since then, many more ancient human relatives have been named, but scientists do not all agree on exactly how many there were. Over time, our understanding of these early humans has grown, and the way we name them has changed.
Species
Main article: Homo
Scientists have found many types of early humans, called Homo, besides the ones we know today, Homo sapiens. Some think these early humans should be grouped into just a few main types, like Homo erectus. For example, Homo ergaster might be part of Homo erectus. New discoveries, like the Dmanisi skulls and Homo naledi fossils, make it hard to sort out all the different early human types.
Subspecies
Homo sapiens subspecies
Further information: Interbreeding between archaic and modern humans, Early modern human, and Race and genetics
The idea of grouping people into smaller types, called subspecies, has been around for a long time. Scientists sometimes use this idea to help organize information, but it can be confusing. For many years, people tried to split humans into different groups based on where they lived, like from Europe or Asia.
Today, scientists know that all humans are very similar genetically, no matter where they come from. Most scientists don’t use subspecies to describe living humans anymore. However, they study older human relatives, like Neanderthals, to learn more about our past.
Homo erectus subspecies
Further information: Homo erectus § Descendants and subspecies
Scientists have found many fossils of an early human called Homo erectus. These fossils come from different places and times, so some scientists have given them different names. However, not all scientists agree on these names or how to group them.
- Homo erectus erectus (Java Man) (1970s)
- Homo erectus yuanmouensis (Yuanmou Man) (Li et al., 1977)
- Homo erectus lantianensis (Lantian Man) (Woo Ju-Kang, 1964)
- Homo erectus nankinensis (Nanjing Man) (1993)
- Homo erectus pekinensis (Peking Man) (1970s)
- Homo erectus palaeojavanicus (Meganthropus) (Tyler, 2001)
- Homo erectus soloensis (Solo Man) (Oppenoorth, 1932)
- Homo erectus tautavelensis (Tautavel Man) (de Lumley and de Lumley, 1971)
- Homo erectus georgicus (1991)
- Homo erectus bilzingslebenensis (Vlček, 2002)
- Homo erectus loganalis (2009)
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Human taxonomy, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.
Safekipedia