New proof has emerged attesting to the complexities of human evolution. A new branch of the hominin family tree has been discovered at Callao Cave on the largest of the Philippine islands, Luzon. Remains belonging to at least three individuals of the extinct species, named Homo luzonensis, have been found by the archaeological team, led by Armand Mijares from the University of the Philippines Diliman. The discovery was shared in the journal Nature on April 10, 2019.
Reconstruction of female Homo floresiensis. Photo by Cicero Moraes et al CC BY 4.0 |
H. luzonensis lived at least 50,000 to 67,000 years ago, reports National Geographic. Experts are declaring this could be one of the most important finds in recent years as the new species does not fit neatly into the currently accepted linear progression from primitive to advanced humans.
The mix of modern and more ancient features, particularly noted in the analysis of the teeth, suggests a much wider diversity in archaic humans once co-existed in Asia. According to National Geographic, “H. luzonensis flips the script, and it continues to challenge the outdated idea that the human line neatly progressed from less advanced to more advanced species.”
H. luzonensis is the third human species identified since 2004 that once lived across the Southeast Asian islands. Mijares told National Geographic that on his first visit to Callao Cave, in 2003, the excavations were taken to a depth of just four feet. At the time, the archaeologists didn’t believe they could possibly find evidence of human activity in deeper — hence older — layers. Subsequent exploration, however, proved him wrong.
Inside the first chamber of Callao Cave in Peñablanca, Cagayan. Photo by Ervin Malicdem CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Besides H. luzonensis, the islands of Southeast Africa have homed a few other species of distant human relatives, including the Denisovans, whose first traces go back to Siberia. H. floresiensis vanished some 50,000 years ago. Some experts say their existence slightly overlapped with that of the modern human. Scientists have also linked some of their features with australopithecines, though some believe H. floresiensis was more closely related with Homo erectus.
After the remarkable finds of the diminutive Homo floresiensis were published in 2004, I said that the experiment in human evolution conducted on Flores could have been repeated on many of the other islands in the region,” commented Prof. Chris Stringer from the Natural History Museum in London, the BBC reports.
“That speculation has seemingly been confirmed on the island of Luzon…nearly 3,000km [1865 miles] away,” he said. Intriguingly, evolution led H. luzonensis and H. floresiensis to share some quite similar attributes, such as their small stature. It’s not so clear, however, which environmental factors had played key roles in distributing the differences between the two.