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The primitive wrist of Homo floresiensis and its implications for hominin evolution

  • Matthew W. Tocheri
  • , Caley M. Orr
  • , Susan G. Larson
  • , Thomas Sutikna
  • , Jatmiko
  • , E. Wahyu Saptomo
  • , Rokus Awe Due
  • , Tony Djubiantono
  • , Michael J. Morwood
  • , William L. Jungers
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Arizona State University
  • National Research and Development Centre for Archaeology
  • University of Wollongong
  • Stony Brook University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

182 Scopus citations

Abstract

Whether the Late Pleistocene hominin fossils from Flores, Indonesia, represent a new species, Homo floresiensis, or pathological modern humans has been debated. Analysis of three wrist bones from the holotype specimen (LB1) shows that it retains wrist morphology that is primitive for the African ape-human clade. In contrast, Neandertals and modern humans share derived wrist morphology that forms during embryogenesis, which diminishes the probability that pathology could result in the normal primitive state. This evidence indicates that LB1 is not a modern human with an undiagnosed pathology or growth defect; rather, it represents a species descended from a hominin ancestor that branched off before the origin of the clade that includes modern humans, Neandertals, and their last common ancestor.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1743-1745
Number of pages3
JournalScience
Volume317
Issue number5845
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 21 2007

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