Yahoo – AFP, Marlowe Hood, January 13, 2016
Paris (AFP) - Scientists have discovered stone-age tools at least 118,000-years-old on an Indonesian island but no trace of the early humans that made them, according to a study released Wednesday.
Paris (AFP) - Scientists have discovered stone-age tools at least 118,000-years-old on an Indonesian island but no trace of the early humans that made them, according to a study released Wednesday.
The
research, published in the journal Nature, also points to a possible link with
the first peoples to arrive in Australia.
Unearthed
at four separate sites on Sulawesi, the trove of several hundred implements is
likely to fuel a long-simmering debate about the identity of now-extinct human
species that first came to the island chain.
In 2003,
fossil remains from a diminutive species of hominin -- a terms that groups
extinct lineages of early man and modern humans -- was discovered in the
neighbouring island of Flores.
Dubbed the
"Hobbit", Homo floresiensis had arrived there at least a million
years earlier, dating tests revealed.
The new
find shows "that Flores was not the only island once inhabited by archaic
humans before Homo sapiens" -- a.k.a. modern man -- "got there around
50,000 years ago," lead author Gerrit van den Bergh, a researcher at the
University of Wollongong in Australia, told AFP.
The Hobbit,
many scientists say, is a descendant of the extinct species Homo erectus that
became smaller across hundreds of generations, a process called "insular
dwarfing" whereby animals -- after migrating across land bridges during
periods of low sea level -- wind up marooned on islands as oceans rise.
"The
fossil fauna associated with the Hobbit and the stone artefacts clearly
indicate isolated island conditions," van den Bergh explained.
Other
scientists had argued that Flores man, as it is sometimes called, might have
had distinct origins, and a few had even suggested it was a tribe of modern
humans suffering a genetic disorder resulting in an abnormally small skull. But
both of these notions have been largely dismissed.
Genetic
commingling
Whether the
makers of the Sulawesi tools are also derived from H. erectus -- which lived in
nearby Java at least 1.5 million years ago -- is impossible to know without
fossil evidence.
But the new
discovery, van den Bergh said, raises the intriguing possibility of a link with
the earliest humans to populate what is today Australia.
"We
know from genetic evidence that the first people coming to Australia, and their
descendants, have a tiny proportion of their DNA inherited from an enigmatic
group of humans called the Denisovans," he said.
Related to
both human and Neanderthal lineages, Denisovans are thought to have split off from
the former about 600,000 years ago, and the latter some 400,000 years later.
They survived until at least 40,000 years ago.
Fossil
records are so meagre -- a few teeth and a pinkie bone excavated from a cave in
Siberia -- that scientists don't even know what they might have looked like.
But the DNA
link with Australia's original inhabitants strongly suggests that some made
their way deep into Asia.
"The
genetic exchange between the ancestors of the modern Australians and Denisovans
probably took place somewhere in Southeast Asia," van den Bergh said.
"It
could well be that the makers of the recently dated stone tools from Sulawesi
could have been these Denisovans."
Unfortunately,
DNA does not survive nearly as well in tropical climes as in frigid Siberia, so
the chances of finding genetic clues are diminished.
One thing
that is certain, the study said, is that the tools were not made by Homo
sapiens. "They are just too old for that," van den Bergh said.
The
sharp-edged tools -- single- or double-faced -- were made by chipping flakes
away from a piece of limestone.
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