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Human ancestors made ancient entry to Java.


A group of humanity's predecessors known as Homo erectus Homo erectus (hō`mō ērĕk`təs), extinct hominid living between 1.6 million and 250,000 years ago. Homo erectus is thought to have evolved in Africa from H. habilis, the first member of the genus Homo.  had reached eastern Asia by 1.5 million years ago and inhabited the region until about 1.0 million years ago, a new investigation finds.

The findings, based on chemical analyses of fossil-bearing soil on the Indonesian island of Java, lend weight to the theory that H. erectus ventured into eastern Asia long before most anthropologists traditionally believed. Geologist Roy Larick of URS URS Yours
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 Corporation in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden  and his colleagues focused on relatively undisturbed sediment layers that alternate with layers of volcanic ash See under Ashes.

See also: Ash
. Other researchers have excavated H. erectus remains throughout these layers, which lie in central Java.

Until about a decade ago, anthropologists assumed from piecemeal evidence that H. erectus reached Java no more than 1 million years ago.

Now that the new findings push the occupation of Java by H. erectus back by 500,000 years, "the big question is, When did hominids first enter this area?" says anthropologist Russell L. Ciochon of the University of Iowa Not to be confused with Iowa State University.
The first faculty offered instruction at the University in March 1855 to students in the Old Mechanics Building, situated where Seashore Hall is now. In September 1855, the student body numbered 124, of which, 41 were women.
 in Iowa City, who is a coauthor of the new study.

The researchers examined a geological deposit called the Bapang formation. It consists of stream-borne layers of earth interspersed with sheets of hardened volcanic ash. Eruptions of one or more nearby volcanoes produced the ash. Most Javanese H. erectus fossils have been found in this formation.

Larick's group measured the relative proportions of two forms of argon argon (är`gŏn) [Gr.,=inert], gaseous chemical element; symbol Ar; at. no. 18; at. wt. 39.948; m.p. −189.2°C;; b.p. −185.7°C;; density 1.784 grams per liter at STP; valence 0.  in volcanic material from throughout the Bapang formation. This technique yielded estimates of the time that has passed since the ash cooled.

Age estimates ranged from 1.51 million years for the lowest layer that the researchers sampled to 1.02 million years for the top-most sample. Progressive declines in estimated age from lower to higher ash layers strengthen confidence in the reliability of the results, according to the researchers.

H. erectus fossils that other researchers have found beneath the Bapang formation must be older than 1.5 million years, Larick and his colleagues say.

Another team, led by geochronologist Carl C. Swisher swisher Sexology A regional term for a really queer queer, not that there's anything wrong with that  III of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., has used the same method to calculate age estimates for the Bapang formation. His findings agree with those of Larick's group.

Swisher described his work 2 years ago at a scientific meeting. But he won't submit his findings for publication until researchers resolve discrepancies between the new argon results and other evidence.

For example, volcanic ash placed at 1 million years old by both Swisher and Larick's teams has been estimated by other scientists to be about 800,000 years old. The latter age rests on measurements of paleomagnetic reversals, the rate of uranium fission fission, in physics: see nuclear energy and nucleus; see also atomic bomb.  in the sediment, and argon dating of meteorite meteorite, meteor that survives the intense heat of atmospheric friction and reaches the earth's surface. Because of the destructive effects of this friction, only the very largest meteors become meteorites.  fragments associated with the ash.

Swisher has also reported argon dates of more than 1.6 million years ago for H. erectus fossils found elsewhere on Java (SN: 3/5/94, p. 150).
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Title Annotation:migration patterns of Homo erectus
Author:Bower, B.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 21, 2001
Words:483
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