Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,559,005 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Evolution's mystery woman: disagreements rage about tiny ancient islanders.


All hail Flo, the diminutive belle of the evolutionary ball. She made a flashy entrance in 2004 using the species name Homo floresiensis, given to her by her discoverers. Flashbulbs popped when the scientists announced the results of their analysis of Flo's partial skeleton and the assorted bones of other individuals uncovered on the Indonesian island of Flores Flores, town, Guatemala
Flores (flōrəs), town (1990 est. pop. 2,200), capital of Petén department, N Guatemala. Flores was built on an island in the southern part of Lake Petén Itzá and on the site of the
.

The shape and size of the fossils showed that they came from little cousins of humankind, the team concluded. The island individuals, who lived between 100,000 and 12,000 years ago, stood about 3 feet, 3 inches tall and possessed chimpanzee-size brains.

Flo's discoverers, led by anthropologist Peter Brown and archaeologist Michael J. Morwood, both of the University of New England The University of New England can refer to:
  • University of New England, Maine, in Biddeford, Maine
  • University of New England, Australia, in New South Wales
 in Armidale, Australia, described their fossil gal as being considerably shorter than members of modern pygmy groups, blessed with incredibly strong legs, and a member of a now-extinct Homo species that had spent tens of thousands of years developing its own toolmaking The term toolmaking (sometimes styled as tool-making or tool making) may refer to:
  • The act of making tools of any kind, from the simplest handtools made of plant fiber or stone, to the most technologically advanced tools.
 tradition on Flores (SN: 10/30/04, p. 275).

Anthropologists largely greeted Flo as a member of a new species of human ancestor. She seemingly provided the first evidence that, like many other animals, the Homo lineage had evolved small island-dwelling forms.

But after being welcomed to the scientists' evolutionary shindig shin·dig  
n.
1. A festive party, often with dancing. Also called shindy.

2. See shindy.



[Probably alteration of shindy.
, Flo continued to make a scene. The fossil islander triggered an unusually vitriolic scientific dispute within months of her discovery. Debate over whether she represents a previously unknown species reached a fever pitch with the publication of a new analysis of the Flores fossils in the Sept. 5 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

That report concludes that Flo was a pygmy Homo sapiens with a stature about 7 inches taller than previously estimated. What's more, Flo displays skull and limb abnormalities that resulted from a still-enigmatic, genetic growth disorder, say anthropologist Teuku Jacob of Gadjah Mada University The Gadjah Mada University (Indonesian: Universitas Gadjah Mada or UGM) is the largest university in Indonesia in terms of student population.[1]  Faculty of Medicine in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, and his coworkers.

These scientists hold that in her prime, Flo tottered on malformed mal·formed
adj.
Abnormally or faultily formed.
 legs or may even have been paralyzed par·a·lyze  
tr.v. par·a·lyzed, par·a·lyz·ing, par·a·lyz·es
1. To affect with paralysis; cause to be paralytic.

2. To make unable to move or act: paralyzed by fear.
. Some of her fellow Flores folk inherited the growth disorder, the scientists suggest. Still, physically capable members of Flo's kind fashioned stone tools that could have been made only by anatomically modern people, Jacob's team asserts.

With such arguments, Flo's evolutionary status has gotten fuzzier, remarks Susan C. Anton of New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the . It's tough to delineate precisely where one hominid hominid

Any member of the zoological family Hominidae (order Primates), which consists of the great apes (orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and bonobos) as well as human beings.
 fossil species ends and another begins, she notes. Longstanding debates over the number of species in the human evolutionary family attest to that difficulty.

"It's a bit like our Pluto," Anton says, referring to astronomers' dustup over how to define planets.

To make matters worse, the Flores finds so far include only one skull and two lower-jaw bones, along with scattered lower-body remains from a handful of individuals. That's precious little material with which to re-create an ancient population.

SPECIOUS spe·cious  
adj.
1. Having the ring of truth or plausibility but actually fallacious: a specious argument.

2. Deceptively attractive.
 SPECIES If you want to look up Flo's flesh-and-blood descendants while visiting Flores today, just look down, says anthropologist Robert B. Eckhardt of Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania State University, main campus at University Park, State College; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855, opened 1859 as Farmers' High School.  in University Park, a coauthor of Jacob's new paper. According to Eckhardt, Flo's modern offspring, the Rampassasa pygmies, live close to Liang Bua Cave The Liang Bua Cave is a one of numerous caves found on the Island of Flores, in East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia. It is also the site of the 2003 discovery of a potentially new species of Homo genus, Homo floresiensis. , the site of the H. floresiensis discoveries.

These small folk, ranging in height from 4 to 4.5 feet and having brains about standard size for modern humans, possess skeletal features originally described by Brown's team as unique to Flo's kind, Eckhardt asserts. For instance, many Rampassasa display receding chins and cheek teeth positioned at an unusual angle.

Overall, 140 skull and tooth features of the Flores fossils also appear in the Rampassasa and other native inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 of Australia and Melanesia, Eckhardt and his colleagues hold. They say that Brown's group erred by comparing their fossil finds mainly with European H. sapiens sa·pi·ens  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of Homo sapiens.



[Latin sapi
 skeletons.

To compound this problem, Flo's discoverers used a mathematical formula for estimating stature that shortchanged her height, Eckhardt contends. Flo, also referred to as LB1, stood an inch or two shy of 4 feet, according to his team's adjusted calculations.

This revised height gives a brain-to-height-ratio that suggests that Flo suffered from an as-yet unspecified growth disorder that included microcephaly microcephaly /mi·cro·ceph·a·ly/ abnormal smallness of the head.microcephal´ic

mi·cro·ceph·a·ly
n.
Abnormal smallness of the head. Also called nanocephaly.
, a genetic condition that results in an unusually small head and brain. Evidence of facial asymmetry facial asymmetry
(āsim´trē),
n the variation in the configuration of one side of the face from the other when viewed in relation to a projected midsagittal line.
 strengthens the argument that Flo suffered from a growth disorder, Eckhardt adds. Composite photographs of her facial bones facial bones,
n.pl the bones of the face, which include the frontal, nasal, maxillary, zygomatic, and mandibular bones.
 that combine an image of either the left or right side and its mirror image look much different than an unmanipulated photo does. These disparities reveal more pronounced facial-feature imbalances than have been observed in typical modern people, his team reports.

Using a scanning device, Eckhardt and his coworkers found that Flo's limb bones, although large in diameter, contain unusually thin outer layers of bone, a sign of developmental trouble.

Another finding suggests that she had great difficulty in moving or that she suffered from paralysis, says study coauthor Maciej Henneberg of the University of Adelaide Its main campus is located on the cultural boulevard of North Terrace in the city-centre alongside prominent institutions such as the Art Gallery of South Australia, the South Australian Museum and the State Library of South Australia.  Medical School in Australia. Muscle-attachment sites on Flo's arm and leg bones show only faint marks, a sign of limited movement throughout her life, since these sites become more prominent with greater muscle use.

A limited ability to twist her upper arm, gleaned from the team's analysis of Flo's fossilized fos·sil·ize  
v. fos·sil·ized, fos·sil·iz·ing, fos·sil·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To convert into a fossil.

2. To make outmoded or inflexible with time; antiquate.

v.intr.
 arms and shoulders, also underscores her movement difficulties.

Flu "is not a normal member of a new species, but an abnormal member of our own," Eckhardt says.

DEVELOPING DOUBTS Some anthropologists see the new report from Jacob's group as a confirmation of their suspicions--largely stimulated by the modern-looking stone tools found with the Flutes fossil--that the bones come from Stone Age people, not a new species of human ancestors. "There is genuine cause for concern about the widely popularized scenario of Homo floresiensis," remarks Robert D. Martin of the Field Museum in Chicago. Jacob's investigation shows that some modern people in Indonesia possess Flo's supposedly unique skeletal features, Martin says.

Determining whether Flu had developmental abnormalities will require studies to identify similarities and differences between her limb and torso bones and those of modern adults with microcephaly. Nonetheless, Flo's brain case strongly resembles that of a short person with microcephaly, Martin and his colleagues conclude in the November Anatomical Record.

The team examined computer-generated reproductions based on measurements of the inner walls of braincases from Flu and two present-day adults with microcephaly, one from Africa and the other from India. The scientists then reconstructed the brain's surface for each specimen. The three individuals display similar neural contours, the researchers say.

Their report counters earlier findings by a team led by Dean Falk of Florida State University Florida State University, at Tallahassee; coeducational; chartered 1851, opened 1857. Present name was adopted in 1947. Special research facilities include those in nuclear science and oceanography.  in Tallahassee. Falk's investigation, using the same method, portrayed Flo's brain as shaped differently from the brains of modern humans, including the brain of a 10-year-old boy from Germany who had microcephaly.

Anthropologist Erik Trinkaus of Washington University in St. Louis “Washington University” redirects here. For other uses, see Washington (disambiguation).
Washington University in St. Louis is a private, coeducational, research university located in St. Louis, Missouri.
 is struck by Flo's similarities to H. sapiens. For instance, bony protrusions that shore up her lower jaw appear in a modern human skull that is from Eastern Europe more than 100,000 years old, Trinkaus says. Brown's team had previously cited these protrusions as a unique feature of the Flutes fossils.

Flo's upper-leg bones display much thinner walls than do any comparable bones from previously identified Stone Age individuals, Trinkaus says. "It reminds me of [modern] cases of long-term limb paralysis," he remarks.

It's not clear whether such characteristics say more about Flo's unique growth pattern or her species identity, in his view. "Whatever these Flores fossils are, let's sort out their biology before talking about their evolutionary status," Trinkaus says.

Inspired by that idea, evolutionary biologist Gary D. Richards of the University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal  reviewed genetic and biological factors that contribute to microcephaly and short stature in people today. Mutations of one gene or a few genes that influence growth hormones in H. sapiens could have yielded an individual such as Flo, Richards concludes in an article published in the November Journal of Evolutionary Biology.

Unlike Jacob and his coworkers, Richards suspects that Flo had no developmental problems such as microcephaly. In his view, she was a typical member of a pygmy H. sapiens group.

Genetically induced reductions of brain and body size show up in substantial minorities of people living in small, isolated populations, Richards says. These changes yield survival-enhancing declines in energy needs with only a minimal loss of thinking skills, he notes.

Individuals in current pygmy populations typically develop "primitive-looking" skeletal features, much like those described for Flo, simply as a result of having small bodies, Richards adds. For Flu and perhaps some of her peers, though, genetically curtailed brain growth might have been more pronounced than that occurring in pygmies today, he contends.

GO WITH FLO One of the co-discoverers of the Flores fossils finds it difficult to contain his contempt for the new paper from Jacob and his colleagues. Brown brands their analysis "a complete crock crock - [American scatologism "crock of shit"] 1. An awkward feature or programming technique that ought to be made cleaner. For example, using small integers to represent error codes without the program interpreting them to the user (as in, for example, Unix "make(1)", which ."

Jacob's group ignores the unique anatomy of H. floresiensis, Brown asserts, such as a thick-boned lower jaw that recalls those of 3-to-4-million-year-old human ancestors in Africa rather than modern human jaws.

The new study erroneously argues that people living on Flores today sometimes lack distinct chins, as Flo's kind does, Brown adds. Projecting teeth can disguise the presence of a chin on Rampassasa individuals, but "all modern humans, including microcephalics, have one," he holds.

Further analysis also supports the notion that the shape of Flo's brain and of the brains of microcephalic mi·cro·ceph·a·ly  
n. pl. mi·cro·ceph·a·lies
Abnormal smallness of the head.



mi
 people differ substantially, says Falk. She and her coworkers have recently extended their earlier work. They've compared computerized braincase brain·case
n.
The part of the skull that encloses the brain; the cranium.
 reproductions for Flo, 9 people with microcephaly and growth retardation, and 10 regular-size adults. Members of the modern groups came from various parts of the world.

First, Falk says, her team identified substantial shape disparities between the brains of modern folks with and without microcephaly.

Next, the researchers considered a brain reconstruction from a 3 1/2-foot-tall woman with dwarfism dwarfism, condition in which an animal or plant is less than normal in size and lacks the capacity for normal growth. Dwarfism is deliberately produced and perpetuated in certain species (e.g., in breeding miniature dogs and cultivating dwarf plants). , a genetic condition that causes short stature but not an unusually small brain. On a measure of brain shape, Flu and the regular-size adults looked alike, as did the woman with dwarfism and adults with microcephaly.

These results support the notion that Flo's brain came from an individual free of developmental problems, Falk concludes. Still, she says, Flu possessed enough unusual neural characteristics to uphold her membership in a separate Homo species.

When Australian researchers not connected to Brown's team compared Flo's skull with skulls of several modern people and of two fossil individuals with microcephaly, they came to the same conclusion (SN: 7/15/06, p. 37).

Such findings are persuasive to anthropologist Bernard Wood of George Washington University George Washington University, at Washington, D.C.; coeducational; chartered 1821 as Columbian College (one of the first nonsectarian colleges), opened 1822, became a university in 1873, renamed 1904.  in Washington, D.C. Much asymmetry in Flo's skull occurred not during development but after her remains became encased en·case  
tr.v. en·cased, en·cas·ing, en·cas·es
To enclose in or as if in a case.



en·casement n.
 in soil that shifted over time and reshaped the bone, Wood argues.

OUT ON A LIMB Scientific defenders of H. floresiensis have also stepped forward with analyses of Flo's arms and legs. In presentations at the Paleoanthropology Society's annual meeting in San Juan, Puerto Rico San Juan (IPA: [saŋ hwaŋ]) (from the Spanish San Juan Bautista, "Saint John the Baptist") is the capital and largest municipality on Puerto Rico. , last April, Susan G. Larson and William L. Jungers, both of the State University of New York (body) State University of New York - (SUNY) The public university system of New York State, USA, with campuses throughout the state.  at Stony Brook, described Flo as a healthy H. floresiensis with some unusual limb features.

Larson reported that Flo's kind possessed substantially shorter collarbones, relative to arm length, than any modern human has. This trait would have pulled the shoulders in and close to the head.

The leg strength of Flo and her peers was "in another universe," Jungers reported (SN: 5/13/06, p. 302). In build and body size, which he estimates at 55 to 75 pounds, Flo resembles Lucy, the 3.2-million-year-old Australopithecus afarensis skeleton from eastern Africa, Jungers says.

Jungers rejects the new portrait of Flo as a developmentally disabled human. In his measurements, the specimen shows normal outer-bone thickness, not the thin walls reported by Jacob's group.

Moreover, Jungers contends, marks made by muscles on bone, or the lack of marks, implies nothing about an individual's mobility. He cites animal studies showing that even intensive exercise doesn't alter the appearance of spots where muscle attaches to bone. He also emphasizes that Flo's limb proportions and estimated height don't appear in any known human population, even the smallest pygmies.

Jacob and his colleagues reject these arguments. For example, they regard Jungers' measurements and his estimate of Flo's height as inaccurate.

Another scientific standoff concerns Stone Age tools found at the Liang Bua Cave and at sites dated between 840,000 and 700,000 years old in the nearby Soa Basin (SN: 6/3/06, p. 341). Flo's discoverers assert that similarities among these artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 show that H. floresiensis carried on a toolmaking tradition passed down for countless generations by its island forebears.

Critics, such as Martin, argue that only individuals with human-size brains could have fashioned tools as complex as those found at Liang Bua. They suspect that the Soa Basin implements are much younger than 700,000 years.

WHO'S THAT LADY? It's hard to know when the clouds will part and Flo's true evolutionary identity will shine through. To make matters worse, Flo's discoverers say that Jacob and his coworkers studied the Liang Bua fossils after furtively borrowing the bones without first gaining permission to do so from the Indonesian National Center for Archaeology, breaking a written agreement between that body and the University of New England.

Jacob didn't answer a request to respond to this accusation.

Better tests of the competing views of the Flores fossils will come with further fossil discoveries on the island and with extraction of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 from Flo's bones, says anthropologist Tim D. White of the University of California, Berkeley.

Like any mystery woman, Flo watches impassively as scientific suitors slug it out for the right to give her a lasting name.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Bower, Bruce
Publication:Science News
Date:Nov 18, 2006
Words:2298
Previous Article:Dashing rogues: freak ocean waves pose threat to ships, deep-sea oil platforms.
Next Article:The African source of the Amazon's fertilizer.(EARTH SCIENCE)



Related Articles
Tasmanian clues to human evolution. (evidence that Tasmania's aborigines originated in Australia rather than Melanesia)
Video Review: The Timeless Way A History of Birth from Ancient to Modern Times.(Review)
Book Review: Our Babies, Ourselves How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Parent.(Review)
The mystery man of the Harlem Renaissance: novelist Rudolph Fisher was a forerunner of Walter Mosley.(The Walls of Jericho; The Conjure-Man Dies: A...
Isle of Dogs.(Audiobook Review)
What role for Canadians?(Peace in the Solomons)
The Mystery of the Ancient Pyramid.(Brief article)(Children's review)(Book review)
Love's Mystery Solved.(Love's Mystery Solved: Building Lasting Relationships)(Brief article)(Book review)
A Promise of Eden.(A Promise of Eden: Life Energy and Personal Growth in an Age of Transformation)(Brief article)(Book review)
Late bloomer: Hubble studies once-dormant galaxy.(This Week)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles