By George Poulos
When did humans first begin to
speak, which speech sounds were uttered first, and when did language evolve
from those humble beginnings? These questions have long fascinated people,
especially in tracing the evolution of modern humans and what makes us
different from other animals. George Poulos has spent most of his academic
career researching the phonetic and linguistic structures of African languages.
In his latest book, On the Origins of Human Speech and Language, he proposes
new timelines for the origins of language. We asked him about his findings.
When and where did human speech
evolve?
Research carried out for this
study indicates that the first speech sounds were uttered about 70,000 years
ago, and not hundreds of thousands or millions of years ago, as is sometimes
claimed in the literature.
While my research has been
primarily based on phonetic (speech sounds) and linguistic (language) analyses,
it has also taken into account other disciplines, like palaeoanthropology (the
study of human evolution), archaeology (analysing fossils and other remains),
anatomy (the body) and genetics (the study of genes).
The transformation of Homo
sapiens (modern humans) from a “non-speaking” to a “speaking” species happened
at about the same time as our hunter-gatherer ancestors migrated out of Africa.
When those early adventurers
migrated beyond the African continent, they took with them the greatest gift
ever acquired by our species – the ability to produce speech sounds, enabled by
the creation of a “speech” gene. It was that ability, more than anything else,
that catapulted them into a world in which they would dominate all other
species.
Which speech sounds were first
uttered?
The very first speech sounds
ever produced were not just random involuntary sounds. Underlying these speech
sounds was a fledgling network that connected certain areas of the brain to
different parts of the vocal tract. Various anatomical and environmental
factors contributed to Homo sapiens’ ability to produce speech sounds for the
first time ever.
Another interesting factor was
an apparent change in the diet of our early ancestors and the possible effect
it might have had on the human brain. The change to what was essentially a
marine diet rich in omega 3 fatty acids occurred when those early humans
migrated from the interior to the coastlines of the continent.
The vocal tract developed
gradually over a long period, and the different stages in its development
determined the types of sounds that could be produced. At the time of the “out
of Africa” migration, the only part of the vocal tract that was physiologically
developed to produce speech sounds was the oral cavity (mouth area).
The only speech sound that
could be produced entirely in the mouth at the time was the so-called “click”
sound. The airstream could be controlled within the mouth. Clicks are the only
known speech sounds that behave in this manner. They still occur today in a few
African languages – predominantly in the Khoisan languages spoken in parts of
Botswana, Namibia and South Africa.
Clicks occur in less than 1% of
the languages of the world. They also occur in a few isolated instances in East
Africa and in certain languages of South Africa that adopted the clicks when
they came into contact with the Khoisan. Clicks have also been noted in one
instance outside the African continent, in an extinct ceremonial language
register known as Damin in Australia.
An example of a click speech
sound is the so-called “kiss” (or bilabial) click where the lips are brought
together, and the back part of the tongue is raised against the back of the
mouth. The lips are then sucked slightly inwards, and when released a click
sound is produced.
My research suggests that the
“kiss” click was probably the first speech sound ever produced by Homo sapiens.
As time moved on, the various parts of the tongue became more and more
manoeuvrable, making it possible for other click sounds to be produced in the
mouth as well.
So, when did the other speech
sounds evolve?
This study demonstrates that the production of all the other human speech sounds (the other consonants, as well as all the vowels) began to take place from approximately 50,000 years ago. This was dependent on the gradual development of a well-proportioned vocal tract which included the mouth, the area behind the mouth (the pharynx), the nasal passages, and the all-important larynx with its vocal cords. Three airstream mechanisms evolved for the production of all speech sounds, and they evolved gradually in successive stages.
How did humans communicate
before clicks?
Before this, the only sounds
humans could produce were the so-called “vocalisations” or vocal calls. Those
were imitations or mimics of various actions or sounds that humans were exposed
to in their environment.
They may have also been
involuntary sounds which expressed various emotions or the involuntary sounds
made when yawning, sneezing etcetera. These must not be confused with the very
intricate mechanisms that are involved in the production of the speech sounds
which form the foundations of what we recognise today as human language.
And the use of full grammatical
language?
As the different speech sounds
evolved, they combined in various ways to form syllables and words. And these
in turn combined with each other in different ways to generate the structural
types of grammatical sentences that characterise modern languages.
The initial ability to produce
speech sounds was the spark that led to the gradual evolution of language.
Grammatical language did not evolve overnight. There was no “single silver bullet”
that generated language.
The indication is that human
language was a fairly late acquisition of Homo sapiens. It is argued in this
study that language, as we know it today, probably began to emerge about 20,000
years ago.
We observed earlier that the
first speech sounds were uttered by the ancestors of the speakers of
present-day Khoisan languages. In the light of this observation, it would be
reasonable to assume that they had a head start in being the first to speak a
grammatical language as well.
To date there is no substantial
phonetic or linguistic evidence to indicate that other species such as the
Neanderthals could have ever spoken a grammatical language. They did not have
the required vocal tract dimensions for speech sound production, let alone the
morphological and syntactic structures that were required for grammatical
language.
Why does this all matter?
The utterance of the very first
speech sounds about 70,000 years ago was the beginning of a journey that was to
lead to the evolution of human language.
Language has provided the
medium of communication that has played a pivotal role in the momentous
developments that have taken place from the earliest known “written” records
that we have access to (some 5,500 years ago), to the highly sophisticated
technological advances that we are witnessing today.
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