Once genetics entered the picture, the definitions of hominids and hominins changed. Credit: K. Cantner, AGI.
Before genetics came along and revealed just how closely modern
humans and chimpanzees are related, humans were classified in their own
family, Hominidae, separate from old world monkeys, which were in the
family Pongidae.
But once humans and chimps were
shown to share approximately 99.4 percent of their genomes, some
researchers proposed combining the families and reclassifying chimps
from Pan troglodytes to Homo troglodytes. This ignited a firestorm of controversy, and the compromise was to leave chimps in the genus Pan
but to lump the great apes and humans into the family Hominidae, which
now includes orangutans, gorillas, chimps, bonobos and humans,
collectively known as hominids. The term “hominin” now refers to all
species of modern humans and early humans after their split from chimps
about 14 million years ago.
The change is a prime example of how adopting new names in the field of paleoanthropology can be difficult, says
Fred Spoor,
a paleoanthropologist at the University College London in England.
“When we start fiddling with names, everybody gets confused,” he says.
“The transition over the last decade from hominids to hominins when we
talk about human ancestors has been a pain. We’ve had to explain and
re-explain, and people still get it wrong half the time.”
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