Before modern humanity overran
the world, every niche was filled by adapted primates over a million years at
the least. The arrival of modern
humanity brought numbers and the inevitable extinction of related small populations. This may have meant no more that a dawn raid
on a small hunting camp, the killing of the males and the forced submission of
the women.
The problem was that the human
population numbered in the hundreds while competitors numbered in the
tens. Two cycles of dawn raids and the
offspring will have at best twenty five percent of the original gene stock.
So while unique archaic hunting
bands operated world wide in a wide variety of related breeds and species even,
the weight of numbers quickly overwhelmed the genetic contribution unique to
them.
The report here already
demonstrates that modern humanity was setting up farming and the large
populations needed to absorb these peoples.
Surely the same happened to the remnant Neanderthal populations. The moment a family is able to gather and
store food in one locale it is able to produce a larger village and ample
manpower to throw off any other threats.
Human fossils hint at new species
By Jonathan AmosScience correspondent, BBC News
14 March 2012 Last updated at 11:19 ET
###
Scientists say the specimens display features that are quite distinct
from fully modern humans
The remains of what may be a previously unknown human species have been
identified in southern China .
The bones, which represent at least five individuals, have been dated
to between 11,500 and 14,500 years ago.
But scientists are calling them simply the Red Deer Cave
people, after one of the sites where they were unearthed.
The team has told the PLoS
One journal that far more detailed analysis of the fossils is required
before they can be ascribed to a new human lineage.
"We're trying to be very careful at this stage about definitely
classifying them," said study co-leader Darren Curnoe from the University of New South
Wales , Australia .
"One of the reasons for that is that in the science of human
evolution or palaeoanthropology, we presently don't have a generally agreed,
biological definition for our own species (Homo sapiens), believe it or not.
And so this is a highly contentious area," he told BBC News.
Much of the material has been in Chinese collections for some time but
has only recently been subjected to intense investigation.
The remains of some of the individuals come from Maludong (or Red Deer Cave ),
near the city of Mengzi in Yunnan Province .
A further skeleton was discovered at Longlin, in neighbouring Guangxi Province .
The skulls and teeth from the two locations are very similar to each
other, suggesting they are from the same population.
###
Scientists continue to excavate at Maludong
But their features are quite distinct from what you might call a fully
modern human, says the team. Instead, the Red Deer Cave
people have a mix of archaic and modern characteristics.
In general, the individuals had rounded brain cases with prominent
brow ridges. Their skull bones were quite thick. Their faces were quite short
and flat and tucked under the brain, and they had broad noses.
Their jaws jutted forward but they lacked a modern-human-like chin.
Computed Tomography (X-ray) scans of their brain cavities indicate they had
modern-looking frontal lobes but quite archaic-looking anterior, or parietal,
lobes. They also had large molar teeth.
Dr Curnoe and colleagues put forward two possible scenarios in their
PLoS One paper for the origin of the Red
Deer Cave
population.
One posits that they represent a very early migration of a primitive-looking Homo
sapiens that lived separately from other forms in Asia
before dying out.
###
How the Red Deer
Cave people might have
looked 11,500 years ago
Another possibility contends that they were indeed a
distinct Homo species that evolved in Asia
and lived alongside our own kind until remarkably recently.
A third scenario being suggested by scientists not connected with the
research is that the Red Deer
Cave people could be
hybrids.
"It's possible these were modern humans who inter-mixed or bred with
archaic humans that were around at the time," explained Dr Isabelle De
Groote, a palaeoanthropologist from London 's Natural History Museum .
"The other option is that they evolved these more primitive
features independently because of genetic drift or isolation, or in a response
to an environmental pressure such as climate."
Dr Curnoe agreed all this was "certainly possible".
Attempts are being made to extract DNA from the remains. This could
yield information about interbreeding, just as genetic studies have on the
closely related human species - the Neanderthals and an enigmatic group of
people from Siberia known as the Denisovans.
Whatever their true place in the Homo family tree, the Red Deer People are an
important find simply because of the dearth of well dated, well described
specimens from this part of the world.
And their unearthing all adds to the fascinating and increasingly
complex story of human migration and development.
"The Red Deer People were living at
what was a really interesting time in China , during what we call the
epipalaeolithic or the end of the Stone Age," says Dr Curnoe.
"Not far from Longlin, there are quite well known archaeological
sites where some of the very earliest evidence for the epipalaeolithic in East Asia has been found.
"These were occupied by very modern looking people who are already
starting to make ceramics - pottery - to store food. And they're already
harvesting from the landscape wild rice. There was an economic transition going
on from full-blown foraging and gathering towards agriculture."
Quite how the Red Deer
People fit into this picture is unclear. The research team is promising to
report further investigations into some of the stone tools and cultural
artefacts discovered at the dig sites.
The co-leader on the project is Professor Ji Xueping of the Yunnan
Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology.
Actuall, the skull as illustrated is very similar to several already well known from China and surrounding areas, it is not sufficiently different to warrant a new species. The scientists in this case were simnply not doing their homework. I have a blog posting up on the matter. Incidentall, the parts of the skull that are least like the known skulls are the RECONSTRUCTED parts, and they were added on by the preparers because there was nothing there originally.
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