A reconstruction of the human skull discovered in Tam Pa Ling.
CREDIT: F. Demeter
20 August 2012
By Charles Choi, LiveScience Contributor Newfound pieces of human skull from "the Cave of the Monkeys" in Laos are the earliest skeletal evidence yet that humans once had an ancient, rapid migration to Asia.
Anatomically modern humans first
arose about 200,000 years ago in Africa. When and how our lineage then
dispersed out of Africa has long proven controversial.
Archaeological evidence and
genetic data suggest that modern humans rapidly migrated out of Africa
and into Southeast Asia by at least 60,000 years ago. However,
complicating this notion is the notable absence of fossil evidence for
modern human occupation in mainland Southeast Asia, likely because those
bones do not survive well in the warm, tropical region.
Now a partial skull from Tam Pa
Ling, "the Cave of the Monkeys" in northern Laos helps fill in this
mysterious gap in the fossil record.
"Most surprising is the fact
that we found anything at all," researcher Laura Lynn Shackelford, a
paleoanthropologist at the University of Illinois, told LiveScience.
"Most people didn't think we'd find anything in these caves, or even in
the region where we're working in mainland Southeast Asia. But we're
stubborn, gone where no one's really looked before, or at least in
almost a century."
Rough terrain, persistent scientists
The fossils were discovered in
2009 in the limestone cave, which is located at the top of the Pa Hang
Mountain 3,840 feet (1,170 meters) above sea level.
"The cave is surrounded by lots
of papaya and banana trees, so a troop of monkeys likes to come and
forage there, therefore its name," Shackelford said.
There were many challenges working in this area.
"It's incredibly difficult to
access the site — it's only 150 miles (240 kilometers) from the capital,
but it takes us two days to drive there because of the rough terrain,"
Shackelford said. "We have to hike up the side of a cliff, do a bit of
rock-climbing to get to the mouth of the cave, and then going in, we
have to go 60 meters (200 ft) down a slope of wet clay. We also have to
carry a generator and lights with us to see in the cave. We have to push
pigs out of the way to get through the jungle — there are just pigs
wandering around there." [Amazing Caves: Photos of Earth's Innards]
"Every bit of clay has to be
removed and taken back up by hand, trowel and bucket, so work is
incredibly slow," she added. "We only go in the dry season in the
winter, so we don't really have to deal with insects and snakes — well,
we did have snakes fall into the pit while excavating. And in the cave,
we've had more than our fair share of spiders and bats."
Oldest bones of modern humans
No artifacts were found at the site, nor were signs of human occupation.
"We think this fossil was
outside with other fauna and flora, and during the rainy season, rain
washed it into the cave," Shackelford said. "In subsequent seasons, more
sediment washed into the cave and covered it."
The shape of the bone and teeth
is distinctly anatomically modern human, not like those of an extinct
lineage such as the Neanderthals. A variety of dating techniques of the
sediments surrounding the fossils suggests they are at least 46,000 to
51,000 years old, and direct dating of the bone suggests a maximum age
of about 63,000 years. This makes these fossils the earliest skeletal
evidence for anatomically modern humans east of the Middle East.
These findings "change the
thinking regarding modern human migration routes into Asia, that there
were more routes of dispersal than previously thought," Shackelford
said.
"The typical thinking was that
once modern humans hugged the coastline to go from India to Southeast
Asia, they went southward into Indonesia and Australasia (the region
comprising Australia, New Zealand and neighboring Pacific islands)," she
explained. "We think they absolutely did that, but we're also
suggesting other populations probably went north or northeast toward
China, and some went through the mountains into mainland Southeast Asia,
taking advantage of river systems. Beforehand, no one thought they
would have gone into the mountains of Laos, Vietnam and Thailand."
The researchers are now
attempting to extract DNA from these fossils to see how related they may
or may not be to later humans that once lived or currently live in the
area. In the future, "the work we have is pretty boundless — there are
literally thousands of limestone caves we can work on in this area to
look for early modern humans," Shackelford said. "We can work here for
the rest of our careers or lives and not see all the caves."
The scientists detailed their findings online Aug. 20 in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
1 comment:
This bone could be King Jayavaman7, get DNA from all King's relative and run the test....plse!
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