Indonesia ‘Hobbits’ may have died out earlier than first
thought
IT WAS a
spectacular discovery: Fossil remains in an Indonesian cave revealed a recent
relative of modern humans that stood less than a metre tall. The creatures were
quickly nicknamed “hobbits.” With evidence that they had survived to just
12,000 years ago, the hobbits appeared to have been the last of our companions
on the human branch of the evolutionary tree to go extinct.
Now, a decade after they made headlines, they’ve lost that distinction. New investigations indicate they evidently disappeared much
earlier — about 50,000 years ago, before Neanderthals did, for example.
The new date raises speculation about whether hobbits were doomed by the
arrival of modern humans on their island. But it doesn’t change much about
their scientific significance, said Matt Tocheri of Lakehead University in
Thunder Bay, Ontario.
Liang Bua, a limestone cave on the Indonesian
island of Flores, pictured when fresh excavations began in 2012. Source:
Smithsonian Digitization Program Office / APSource:AP
He and others wrote the new paper with three of the researchers who’d
first reported the discovery in 2004. The new paper was released overnight by
the journal Nature.
The hobbits are formally known as Homo floresiensis, reflecting their
home on the Indonesian island of Flores. With small, chimp-sized brains, the
hobbits had skulls that resembled Homo erectus, which lived in Africa and Asia.
But they also had long arms and short legs that hearkened back to the much
older evolutionary forerunners best known for the skeleton dubbed Lucy.
It’s not clear where they fit in the human family tree. They may have
descended from taller ancestors who shrank because of their isolation on the
island. Some scientists have argued they were diseased modern humans rather
than a separate species, but experts called that a minority view and several
said the new dates make it less likely.
Hobbits evidently made the stone tools that were found along with
skeletal remains in the Liang Bua cave. The new analysis says the remains are
100,000 to 60,000 years old, while the artefacts range in age from about
190,000 to 50,000 years.
Researchers revised the original age estimates after new excavations
revealed more about the geology of the cave. Sediments were sampled to date the
artefacts and bones.
“I think it’s a terrific paper,” said Bernard Wood of George Washington
University, who had no role in the research. “They have done everything you can
possibly ask.” So did the arrival of modern humans spell the end for the
hobbits, as is proposed for the demise of the Neanderthals in Europe and Asia
about 40,000 years ago?
There’s no evidence that modern humans occupied Flores until long after
the hobbits were gone. But they are known to have lived not far away, in
Australia, some 50,000 years ago — right about the time the hobbits evidently
disappeared.
“It is certainly suggestive,” said anthropologist Karen Baab of Middle
Western University in Glendale, Arizona, who studies the hobbits but didn’t
participate in the new work.
Richard Roberts of the University of Wollongong in Australia, a study
author, said in an email it is “certainly a possibility to be considered, but
solid evidence is needed in order to demonstrate it. One thing we can be
certain of, it will definitely be a major focus of further research.”
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