Showing posts with label Homo luzonensis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homo luzonensis. Show all posts

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Chris Stringer: Meet the Relatives

Chris Stringer has a post in the Financial Times titled Meet the Relatives.  It is sort of a whirlwind tour through the evolution of the genus Homo.    He writes:
The discoveries of Homo floresiensis, Homo luzonensis, Denisovans and Homo naledi in the past 15 years remind us that the fossil record of humans is still very patchy — stone tools are scattered across much of Africa as a witness to widespread human occupation, yet fossil evidence has been recovered from less than 10 per cent of that continent’s area.

The percentage coverage for Asia is hardly any better: there is, for example, currently only one significant human fossil from the whole of the Indian subcontinent. The discoveries of the past few years underline just how much evolutionary history remains unknown, with other extinct lineages no doubt still to be revealed.

Many of the new finds challenge how we classify fossils in relation to Homo sapiens today. I continue to call the Neanderthals a different species from us, based on their distinctive skeletons and skulls; others feel that the recent evidence of interbreeding and increasing evidence of sophisticated behaviour mean that we should merge them, and the Denisovans, into our species.
I think that the discovery of the Xuchang hominins indicates that there has been considerable population mixing for several hundred thousand years.  As I wrote at the time:
These two Chinese skulls stand at the crossroads of these population movements. While showing clear Neandertal characteristics, they also express modern traits, possibly reflecting mixing with the late, modern human arrivals represented by the recent modern human finds at Daoxian. Yet they also express a clear link to ancient East Asian populations. The implications of these skulls are stark: there has been widespread population mixing and regional continuity in Europe and Asia for at least 400 thousand years. Not only did the Neandertals feel enough cultural kinship to mate and have children with these East Asian people, the early modern humans coming out of Africa did, as well. As Chris Davis of China Daily News put it: “One big happy family.”
Whether this represents such behavior at the peripheries of different species or that of one polytypic species is, as yet, unclear.  It is very clear that our understanding of how these populations interacted is rudimentary, at best. 

Monday, April 15, 2019

New Species of Hominin Found in Phillipines

From a story in UPI:
At the completion of excavations on the island of Luzon, scientists had unearthed several teeth, part of a thigh bone, and a few hand and foot bones. The fossils comprise the "the earliest direct evidence of a human presence in the Philippines," according to the latest study.

The fossilized bones, dated to between 67,000 and 50,000 years ago, feature a mix of anatomical characteristics, some that recall more primitive hominins and others similar to those of more modern human species.
Callao Cave is toward the northern tip of Luzon. The corresponding article from Nature seems to indicate that the fossil remains from this cave are “all over the map.”  The premolars indicate size and shape affinities to later Homo, while some of the characteristics are australopithecine (!).  This is also true of the hand elements. 

Although we have found human fossil remains in East Asia for some time (1896 on), there are large gaps in our knowledge, especially from the first appearance of Homo erectus to the advent of modern humans.  These fossils, while giving us more  information than we had, muddy the waters a bit.  Once upon a time, Grover Kranz (RIP) tried to convince me that australopithecines could be found in East Asia, but his evidence was based on a badly crushed occipital bone. 

It is clear from the presence of H. floresiensis and the current evidence that primitive traits were being retained in some groups but, as the authors point out, we need quite a bit more fossil material to make any definitive assessments.