The Scotsman

New species of extinct human discovered that could ‘overturn evolution’

- By JOHN VON RADOWITZ

A previously unknown species of human that lived at the same time our ancient ancestors were colonising Europe has been discovered in the Philippine­s.

Bones and teeth of the newly described “hominin” were found in Callao Cave on Luzon, the largest island in the Asian archipelag­o.

They contain a mixture of old and new features that have excited scientists and threaten to overturn accepted theories of human evolution.

Hominins are members of the human family tree more closely related to one another than to apes.

Today, only one species of this group remains, Homo sapiens, to which everyone on Earth belongs.

It was a different story 50,000 years ago, when several varieties of hominin co-existed.

They included our own species, H Sapiens, and Neandertha­ls, both living in Europe and western Asia, the Denisovans in Siberia, and the diminutive H floresiens­is – nicknamed “hobbits” – from Indonesia.

Now another name has been added to the list, Homo luzonensis, after scientists analysed an unusual set of fossil remains from Callao Cave.

Several feet and hand bones, a partial thigh bone, and teeth from at least three individual­s were unearthed and dated to a time period in the late Pleistocen­e era as recent as 50,000 years ago.

The teeth are highly unusual. While the molars of H luzonensis were strikingly small – similar in size to those of modern humans – they shared other characteri­stics with those of far more primitive hominins, including one known for its massive jaws and teeth.

One of the foot bones examined had an anatomy distinct from all other known hominins, including modern humans.

In addition, H luzonensis had toes identical to those of Australopi­ethecus, a primitive species that lived in Africa at least two million years earlier.

It also had primitive looking fingers, and both the fingers and toes were curved – suggesting that the creature liked to climb.

Writing in the journal Nature, Dr Florent Detroit, from the Museum of Natural History in Paris, France, and colleagues conclude: “The discovery of H luzonensis underscore­s the complexity of the evolution, dispersal and diversity of the genus Homo outside of Africa, and particular­ly in the islands of south-east Asia, during the Pleistocen­e.”

All species of human, both living and extinct, are believed to have originated in Africa.

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