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Stones of contention: tiny Homo species tied to ancient tool tradition.


New discoveries have shifted a prehistoric, island controversy from bones to stones. Simple stone tools accompanied the fossils of Homo floresiensis, the half-size human cousin that inhabited 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
 around 74,000 to 12,000 years ago, but some scientists argued that those tools had been made by Homo sapiens. Now, much older tools discovered on Flores suggest that H. floresiensis individuals carried on cultural practices initiated by their island ancestors.

Stone artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 much like those previously found among H. floresiensis fossils in Flores' 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.  have emerged at another site on the island. The new finds date to between 840,000 and 700,000 years ago, reports a team led by Adam Brumm of the Australian National University Australian National University, located in Canberra and state-sponsored, founded 1946 as Australia's only completely research-oriented university. Originally limited to graduate studies, it expanded in 1960, merging with Canberra University College (est. 1929).  in Canberra.

Ancient 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.
 settlers of the island--either large-bodied Homo erectus or a smaller species in our evolutionary family--lived at that site, called Mata Menge, and passed on their 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.
 techniques to later generations, the scientists propose. Eventually, when the small-brained H. floresiensis evolved, the species retained many of the tool-production practices from its forebears, Brumm and his coworkers conclude in the June 1 Nature.

"On Flores, we see continuity of a rather specific package of stone-toolmaking behaviors, including the manufacturing of distinctive tools that do not appear elsewhere in southeastern Asia" Brumm says.

The latest Flores finds show that the diminutive islanders, with their craniums the size of chimps" possessed enough brainpower brain·pow·er  
n.
1. Intellectual capacity.

2. People of well-developed mental abilities: a country that doesn't value its brainpower.

Noun 1.
 to parlay cultural traditions into effective toolmaking. Until now, debate about the small Flores creatures centered on suspicions that such tools could only come from modern humans, who in this case had experienced stunted growth (SN: 10/15/05, p. 244).

Mata Menge lies 50 kilometers east of the Liang Bua cave. Mata Menge excavations in 2004 and 2005 yielded 487 stone artifacts. Another 20 stone implements had been unearthed at the same spot in 1994. All the finds lay in soil sandwiched by volcanic ash layers, which the researchers dated.

The same type of rock and comparable toolmaking techniques characterize the 3,626 Liang Bua artifacts that have been excavated, Brumm's group asserts.

Archaeologists regard the new Flores discoveries cautiously; and in some cases with deep skepticism.

It's hard to know whether a single Stone Age culture connected residents of Mata Menge to Liang Bua's inhabitants or whether separate hominid populations happened to exploit similar, basic toolmaking techniques, remarks Dietrich Stout of University College London “UCL” redirects here. For other uses, see UCL (disambiguation).
University College London, commonly known as UCL, is the oldest multi-faculty constituent college of the University of London, one of the two original founding colleges, and the first British
. For now, Stout attributes the Liang Bua tools to H. floresiensis "until a better candidate comes along."

The new finds leave unresolved the identity, of the Flores toolmakers, asserts John Shea 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. "I don't think we can rule out Homo sapiens as the [maker] of the Liang Bua tools," he says.

H. sapiens sa·pi·ens  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of Homo sapiens.



[Latin sapi
 had spread through much of Indonesia by around 50,000 years ago and made stone tools similar to those found on Flores, Shea notes. The tools from Mata Menge and Liang Bua are too simple to demonstrate a cultural connection, in his view.

James L. Phillips of the Field Museum in Chicago calls the new report's conclusions "beyond belief." Mata Menge artifacts lay in unstable river sediment that moved over time, making it impossible to obtain accurate age estimates, Phillips holds.

He suspects that H. sapiens made both the Mata Menge and Liang Bus tools no more than 18,000 years ago.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Bower, B.
Publication:Science News
Date:Jun 3, 2006
Words:566
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