Liang Bua 'Homo floresiensis' mandibles and mandibular teeth: A contribution to the comparative morphology of a new hominin species

Title
Liang Bua 'Homo floresiensis' mandibles and mandibular teeth: A contribution to the comparative morphology of a new hominin species
Publication Date
2009
Author(s)
Brown, Peter J
Maeda, Tomoko
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1016/j.jhevol.2009.06.002
UNE publication id
une:4990
Abstract
In 2004, a new hominin species, 'Homo floresiensis', was described from Late Pleistocene cave deposits at Liang Bua, Flores. 'H. floresiensis' was remarkable for its small body-size, endocranial volume in the chimpanzee range, limb proportions and skeletal robusticity similar to Pliocene 'Australopithecus', and a skeletal morphology with a distinctive combination of symplesiomorphic, derived, and unique traits. Critics of 'H. floresiensis' as a novel species have argued that the Pleistocene skeletons from Liang Bua either fall within the range of living Australomelanesians, exhibit the attributes of growth disorders found in modern humans, or a combination of both. Here we describe the morphology of the LB1, LB2, and LB6 mandibles and mandibular teeth from Liang Bua. Morphological and metrical comparisons of the mandibles demonstrate that they share a distinctive suite of traits that place them outside both the 'H. sapiens' and 'H. erectus' ranges of variation. While having the derived molar size of later 'Homo', the symphyseal, corpus, ramus, and premolar morphologies share similarities with both 'Australopithecus' and early 'Homo'. When the mandibles are considered with the existing evidence for cranial and postcranial anatomy, limb proportions, and the functional anatomy of the wrist and shoulder, they are in many respects closer to African early 'Homo' or 'Australopithecus' than to later 'Homo'. Taken together, this evidence suggests that the ancestors of 'H. floresiensis' left Africa before the evolution of 'H. erectus', as defined by the Dmanisi and East African evidence.
Link
Citation
Journal of Human Evolution, 57(5), p. 571-596
ISSN
1095-8606
0047-2484
Start page
571
End page
596

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