Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Climate And Archaic Hominins

John Hawks has an intriguing analysis of a new paper on how the range and interactions of Neanderthals and Denisovans may have had a climate component. We know from the existence of genetic evidence showing Neanderthal-Denisovan admixture that there was some interaction.

He is skeptical of some aspects of the paper, including the hypothesis that Denisovans were systemically more cold tolerant, and the underlying concept of that there was a stable over time geographic range of occupation by particular species with frontiers that were rarely crossed. He acknowledges, however, that there is a wide geographic range where they could have been Neanderthal-Denisovan interaction. He also notes that:

The conclusion I draw from Ruan and colleagues' study is that no strong east-west climate barriers could have kept these populations apart for the hundreds of thousands of years of their evolution. That leaves open the possibility that other aspects of the environment besides temperature, rainfall, and general biome composition could have shaped their evolution. The alternative is that the survival and local success of hominin groups was itself so patchy over the long term that only a handful of lineages could persist.

One hypothesis that I've advanced over the years is that the jungles and hominin occupants of mainland Southeast Asia, formed a barrier to Neanderthal and modern human expansion until the Toba eruption at least temporarily removed that barrier.

I reproduce two images he borrows from papers he discusses below: 

One issue with the Denisovan habitat range shown is that Denisovan admixture in modern humans is strongest to the east of the Wallace line and together with residual Denisovan admixture in Southeast Asia and East Asia (albeit greatly diluted) suggests a much greater warm temperature range for these ancient hominins than the chart above suggests in both island and mainland Southeast Asia.

2 comments:

DDeden said...

https://www.sci.news/paleontology/anadoluvius-turkae-12210.html

8.7-Million-Year-Old Fossil Suggests Ancestors of Humans and African Apes Evolved in Europe
Aug 24, 2023 by News Staff

The fossilized remains of the Miocene-period ape species Anadoluvius turkae have been unearthed at the paleontological site of Çorakyerler in central Anatolia, Türkiye.

Anadoluvius turkae and other fossil apes from nearby Greece (Ouranopithecus) and Bulgaria (Graecopithecus) form a group that come closest in many details of anatomy and ecology to the earliest known hominins, or humans.

“While the remains of early hominines are abundant in Europe and Anatolia, they are completely absent from Africa until the first hominin appeared there about 7 million years ago.”

“This new evidence supports the hypothesis that hominines originated in Europe and dispersed into Africa along with many other mammals between 9 and 7 million years ago, though it does not definitively prove it.”

“For that, we need to find more fossils from Europe and Africa between 8 and 7 million years old to establish a definitive connection between the two groups.”

The findings were published in the journal Communications Biology.

_____

A. Sevim-Erol et al. 2023. A new ape from Türkiye and the radiation of late Miocene hominines. Commun Biol 6, 842; doi: 10.1038/s42003-023-05210-5


My Black Sea Refuge hypothesis seems to be gaining traction. The site is between Mediterranean and Black Sea, a continental + marine climate.
Could they speak? Did they sleep in arboreal bowl nests or ground dome-shields? Did they eat nuts & fruits, perhaps seasonally shore foods?
Article claims fossil found near dry forest / open plains fauna, but porcupines are forest arboreal fauna.

andrew said...

Cool. Thanks.