Islamic Calendar

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Hobbit from Indonesia- human evolution need revision




In 2004 a team of Australian and Indonesian scientists who had been excavating a cave called Liang Bua on the Indonesian island of Flores announced that they had unearthed something extraordinary: a partial skeleton of an adult human female who would have stood just over a meter tall and who had a brain a third as large as our own. The specimen, known to scientists as LB1, quickly received a fanciful nickname—the hobbit,like a race in Lord of the Ring. The team proposed that LB1 and the other fragmentary remains they recovered represent a previously unknown human species, Homo floresiensis. Their best guess was that H. floresiensis was a descendant of H. erectus—the first species known to have colonized outside of Africa. The creature evolved its small size, they surmised, as a response to the limited resources available on its island home—a phenomenon that had previously been documented in other mammals, but never humans.


Scientists initially postulated that H. floresiensis descended from H. erectus, a human ancestor with body proportions similar to our own.New investigations show that the hobbits were more primitive than researchers thought, however—a finding that could overturn key assumptions about human evolution.







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