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Jumat, 15 Desember 2017

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The 'hobbit' was a separate species of human, new dating reveals ...
src: www.sciencemag.org

Liang Bua is a limestone cave on the island of Flores, Indonesia. The site is slightly north of the town of Ruteng in Manggarai Regency (kabupaten) in East Nusa Tenggara province.

The cave was the site of the 2003 discovery of a potentially new species of Homo genus, Homo floresiensis, the remains of which are coded LB1, LB2, etc., after the cave. The Indonesian field coordinator of the excavation team, Thomas Sutikna, was preparing to close up the dig at Liang Bua when the first indications of the important fossils were uncovered. So far it is the only location in which such remains have been identified, although archeological work in the nearby Soa Valley in Ngada Regency appears to support findings from the Liang Bua site.

In 2010 and 2011, archaeologists discovered two hominin teeth in the cave that did not come from Homo floresiensis. According to Sutikna, the teeth date to around 46,000 BP and are likely to have come from Homo sapiens.

In 2013, a 3D model of the cave created via laser scanning was made available online by the Smithsonian Institution.


Video Liang Bua



Disagreement

There is continuing disagreement amongst scientists as to whether the discoveries represent a new and distinct hominid species. On one hand, some experts on human origin argue that the discoveries represent a distinct species that lived in relatively modern times. Others argue that it is more likely that the bones of the most complete individual found in Liang Bua (individual LB1) are those of a local person who was, quite likely, simply suffering from a medical condition (perhaps Down Syndrome) rather than indicating that a unique species of Homo lived in Flores.


Maps Liang Bua



Palaeofauna

  • Homo floresiensis,
  • Stegodon florensis insularis, dwarfed stegodontid proboscidean
  • Papagomys theodorverhoeveni, giant rat
  • Papagomys armandvillei, giant rat
  • Varanus komodoensis, giant varanid lizard
  • Leptoptilos robustus, giant marabou stork.

A decade on and Indonesia's 'Hobbit' still holds secrets
src: 62e528761d0685343e1c-f3d1b99a743ffa4142d9d7f1978d9686.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com


References


Hobbits' may have died out sooner than thought
src: 3c1703fe8d.site.internapcdn.net


Further reading

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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