Originally posted by webboffin
Why not try and discuss the implications of this new data instead.
I did but you ignored the post.
There has been a debate on when bipedality first appeared in the hominid lineage. One hypothesis is that our common ancestor with chimps was a knuckle walker and that chimps and gorillas simply kept the trait.
Another hypothesis is that knucklewalking is an adaptation characteristic of the chimp/gorilla lineage and was not in the common ancestor. The closer we find fossils to the split -- like Toumai -- it looks like bipedality goes back to very close to the split. Clarke's data suports the second hypothesis. However, to be dramatic and be more important, Clarke paints a strawman version of hominid evolution by implying that the first hypothesis is the only one, thus making him more important by "discovering" the second.
What is being discussed is the exact shape of the family tree, not that there is one. And when and why adaptations occurred in our history, not that the adaptations occurred.
Weboffin, in science whenever you answer a question, 3 or 4 new questions pop up out of the answer. So, having discovered that humans evolved, the next questions were: what is the exact evolutionary history and the sequence of acquiring human adaptations?
The data is pretty conclusive that H. sapiens, H. ergastor/erectus, and H. habilis are chronospecies: the same species at different points in time. The data at this time is pretty conclusive that a species of Australopithecus is the chronospecies to H. habilis. Most anthropologists think it's A. afarensis, and the data I've seen is so persuasive that I think it's preverse not to accept it as (provisionally) the case. A few think it was A. africanus. And Clarke thinks he has a new species of Australopithecus that may be the ancestor.
Interspersed among all this is where the Paranthropus genus branched off and where H. rudolphensis, H. antessori, and H. neandertals come in. It is clear that H. neandertals and H. sapiens are separate species. But did H. erectus give rise directly to both or did H. erectus split to H. heidelbergensis in Europe which gave rise to H. neandertals?
Now, if you really want to discuss all this, I can give you references to read to familiarize yourself with the discussion and the background for the discussion I gave above.