Xamonas Chegwé wrote:There would have been a fair sized population of hominids with varying traits. At some point, geographical isolation would have meant that one sub-group would have evolved into the ancestors of modern-day Homo sapiens.
Identifying the point at which a new species arises is impossible. There is a continuous gradation from the ancestor species to the descendant. It is the breeding isolation (usually geographical) of one group from other similar groups that causes speciation.
Indeed and we've already identified several different species that emerged in Africa in what were undoubtedly regionally isolated groupings of hominids that existed over long periods of time, and it seems we keep finding new ones (many paleo hominid fossils are difficult to identify with one species or another).
So it seems we'll never know what a "starting population" was because the beginning occurred over time and happened in a variety of different regions, a situation of high but very slow flux. There may have been as many as 50 precursor species. The situation doesn't gain much clarity until homo erectus made his way out of Africa through the Middle East and into Europe and Asia and beyond. Even as late as about 20,000 years ago there were still two species living on the planet, Neandertal and Homo Sapiens.
It is a fascinating question but the history spans several million years and is marked by differentiated speciation in widely disparate regions ... until it becomes impossble to have the kind of clarity we'd like. Obviously, the picture will gain more focus as time passes and new finds are made, but to hope for ultimate clarity is probably not reasonable because we won't find enough to complete the picture in any comprehensive way.
Given the time and geography involved we're probably fortunate to know what we do know about it, which is as far from zero as it is far from complete. We can hope that more finds will occur to help fill in the picture and surely they will be made, but I don't think we'll ever have a fully developed notion of our origins. We will have some good general ideas, but a definitive map seems out of the question.