Post by K on Mar 12, 2008 0:01:28 GMT -5
S.African, US scientists find more 'hobbits' in Pacific
A team of scientists have discovered fossils of an extinct hobbit-like people on a Pacific Ocean island where they lived up to 3,000 years ago, a South African university reported Tuesday.
The former island cave inhabitants, some "as small as just over a metre", shared features with the controversial Homo floresiensis specimens discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2004, said a statement from Johannesburg's Withingyersrand University (Wits).
The discovery, initially made by South African palaeoanthropologist Lee Berger while holidaying on the Micronesian island of Palau in 2006, features in this week's edition of the scientific journal PLoS ONE.
The subjects of the 2004 discovery, dubbed "hobbits" after author J.R.R Tolkien's pint-sized and hairy-footed fiction heroes, have been at the centre of a scientific argument over their classification.
Some have argued they were a formerly unknown human species, while others maintain the tiny humans had merely suffered from stunting.
"The Palauen fossils exhibit a surprising number of traits that were originally used to describe the hobbit as a unique species," said Berger.
These included a small body size with large teeth, small faces and reduced chins.
After Berger discovered the fossils on holiday, he and a team of scientists from the United States' Duke and Rutgers universities, as well as a group of Wits students, returned for further examinations on a grant from the National Geographic Society.
"What we found astounded our most experienced explorers, even the Palauen officials who accompanied us," said Berger.
Added Bonita de Klerk, a Wits doctoral student and study co-author: "The cave where Berger had found the original fossils was literally filled with tens of individuals. When excavated, the sand itself was practically made up of ground human bone."
The extinct individuals are believed to have lived on the island between 1,400 and 3,000 years ago.
The statement said a second cave has revealed another large cache of bones.
"It just demonstrates the great need for more exploration to be undertaken in these remote areas," said Berger.
© 2008 AFP
physorg.com/news124458098.html
A team of scientists have discovered fossils of an extinct hobbit-like people on a Pacific Ocean island where they lived up to 3,000 years ago, a South African university reported Tuesday.
The former island cave inhabitants, some "as small as just over a metre", shared features with the controversial Homo floresiensis specimens discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2004, said a statement from Johannesburg's Withingyersrand University (Wits).
The discovery, initially made by South African palaeoanthropologist Lee Berger while holidaying on the Micronesian island of Palau in 2006, features in this week's edition of the scientific journal PLoS ONE.
The subjects of the 2004 discovery, dubbed "hobbits" after author J.R.R Tolkien's pint-sized and hairy-footed fiction heroes, have been at the centre of a scientific argument over their classification.
Some have argued they were a formerly unknown human species, while others maintain the tiny humans had merely suffered from stunting.
"The Palauen fossils exhibit a surprising number of traits that were originally used to describe the hobbit as a unique species," said Berger.
These included a small body size with large teeth, small faces and reduced chins.
After Berger discovered the fossils on holiday, he and a team of scientists from the United States' Duke and Rutgers universities, as well as a group of Wits students, returned for further examinations on a grant from the National Geographic Society.
"What we found astounded our most experienced explorers, even the Palauen officials who accompanied us," said Berger.
Added Bonita de Klerk, a Wits doctoral student and study co-author: "The cave where Berger had found the original fossils was literally filled with tens of individuals. When excavated, the sand itself was practically made up of ground human bone."
The extinct individuals are believed to have lived on the island between 1,400 and 3,000 years ago.
The statement said a second cave has revealed another large cache of bones.
"It just demonstrates the great need for more exploration to be undertaken in these remote areas," said Berger.
© 2008 AFP
physorg.com/news124458098.html