This discovery is slowly been better understood and it appears we have a dwarfed version of homo erectus. This pretty well captures the picture presented.
I
have also seen some evidence to suggests small bands of homo erectus
remain extant throughout the world. They have been glimpsed and are
quite able to work around us.
There
was really no good reason for them to go extinct so long as they
stayed out of our way and that is easily provided if they stay in the
forests. Most likely they follow the deer herds rather well and any
rabbit would be a handy meal for two or three.
As
we have learned, nocturnal skills and forest skills are perfect.
Having a decent coat of hair allows easy setting up anywhere. What
it does not allow is a too small a hunting range. You do have to have
ample game available.
Study backs 'hobbit' island dwarfism theory
Theory
1: Some critics say that the hobbit isn't a separate species at all,
but belonged to a group of modern humans whose size was restricted
because they had a disease.
Theory
2: Others believe that it evolved from a tiny-brained, ape-like
creature that travelled from Africa millions of years ago.
Theory
3: But the new research suggests that an early human species that
lived in Asia called Homo erectus arrived on the island and underwent
dwarfism.
A
diminutive species of human whose remains were found on the
Indonesian island of Flores could have shrunk as a result of island
dwarfism as it adapted to its environment.
A study
of the remains of the creature, nicknamed the "hobbit",
shows that it is possible for it to have been a dwarf version of an
early human species.
The
hobbit co-existed with our species until 12,000 years ago.
Since
its discovery in 2003, researchers have struggled to explain the
origins of these metre-high, tiny-brained people, known
scientifically as Homo
floresiensis.
One
popular theory is that the hobbit evolved from a relatively large
brained and large bodied human that was prevalent in east Asia, known
as Homo
erectus.
The theory is that after H.
erectus moved
to Flores, it began to shrink in size over the generations by a
process known as island dwarfism, which has been seen to occur in
other species.
Critics
though argue that it would be impossible for erectus's
brain to shrink so much in relation to its body.
Alternative
theories are that these creatures are either a small group of modern
humans, Homo
sapiens,
whose brains and bodies have been prevented from growing normally
because of a wasting disease, or that they are descendants of
tiny-brained ape-like creatures.
New
scans by a Japanese team which includes Dr Yousuke Kaifu of the
National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, shows that the hobbit's
brain was a little larger than previous estimates had suggested.
Small
brain
Moreover,
Dr Kaifu and his colleagues have also carried out a comparative
analysis of the ratio of brain to body size of present-day humans
which they say indicates that it is indeed possible for erectus's
brain to have shrunk to the size of the hobbit's.
"Our
work does not prove that erectus is
the ancestor of floresiensis,"
Dr Kaifu told BBC News. "But what we have shown is that it is
possible (and counters the argument) by many people
that floresiensis's
brain is too small to (be consistent with the view that it is a dwarf
form of erectus)"
The
hobbit: Could island life have shrunk this creature to diminutive
proportions?
Dr
Kaifu's analysis backs an earlier study of the hobbit's brain cases
by Prof Dean Falk of Florida State University in 2005 and 2007. She
concluded that the hobbit was a separate human species. She told BBC
News that she believed that the Japanese researchers have "nailed
it".
"The
authors make a compelling case that H.
floresiensis could
be descended from an earlyHomo
erectus population,"
she said. "With all the hoopla surrounding floresiensis,
this rigorous analysis is most welcome."
Prof
Falk said that she did not believe that the Japanese analysis
excluded the alternative hypothesis of an as-yet-undiscovered
small-brained ape-like ancestor that migrated from Africa. That was a
view echoed by Professor Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum
in London.
"Personally
I don't think it solves the problem," he told BBC News. "There
are primitive features in the skeleton of floresiensiswhich
for me suggests that it comes from quite a primitive form of human:
one that may have been around two million years ago rather than one
million years ago".
Twists
and turns
Professor
Stringer said that the debate over floresiensis is
part of a much wider discussion among scientists in the field which
is resulting in a new and exciting retelling of the story of how
humans emerged.
"It
is a fascinating find because it shows that human evolution took a
number of twists and turns. It isn't just about the evolution of us
modern humans, but actually there are lots of other species around".
"Floresiensis was
a failed experiment that lasted to within the last 50,000 years or so
and we are the last survivors of all these other experiments in
evolving humans".
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