Possible Duplicate:
What exactly is POSIX?
What is Unix now?
Are they only the Unix’s developed by Bell Labs or do the SCO ones count too? Are there others?
Possible Duplicate:
What exactly is POSIX?
What is Unix now?
Are they only the Unix’s developed by Bell Labs or do the SCO ones count too? Are there others?
UNIX (POSIX) is a set of "guidelines" which must be followed by an operating system (and it's parts) for it to be considered a "UNIX".
So asking which is the UNIX OS that the others are based on or which was the first doesn't really mean anything. Sure there was an operating system which was the first to be coined a UNIX -- but really, what you're talking about it the guidelines it follows.
Unix is a trademarked name and there is only one specification for Unix. To be called a Unix system, you must apply for and be certified to use that name.
If your question is about code base lineage and not standards, current OSes directly descending from the original Bell Labs / AT&T Unix releases are AIX, HP-UX, Oracle Solaris & OpenSolaris derivatives all coming from System V release 4 and (Open/Free/Net)BSD and derivatives from the much earlier Unix version 6.
While Mac OS X has some BSD code, its core is not a descendant of the Unix kernel code.
The history and timeline of UNIX is nicely presented here and shown pictorially here.
As noted, there is a single UNIX specification that defines "Unix" to which all products must conform to be officially compliant and branded. The various vendor brands can be found here.