Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

H. luzonensis discovered in Asia

Fossilized bones and teeth found in the Philippine­s reveal a long-lost cousin of modern people.

- By Malcolm Ritter Homo

NEW YORK — Fossil bones and teeth found in the Philippine­s have revealed a long-lost cousin of modern people that evidently lived around the time our own species was spreading from Africa to occupy the rest of the world.

It’s another reminder that, although Homo sapiens is now the only surviving member of our branch of the evolutiona­ry tree, we’ve had company for most of our existence.

And it makes our understand­ing of human evolution in Asia “messier, more complicate­d and whole lot more interestin­g,” says one expert, Matthew Tocheri of Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario.

In a study released by the journal Nature, scientists describe a cache of seven teeth and six bones from the feet, hands and thigh of at least three individual­s.

They were recovered from Callao Cave on the island of Luzon in the northern Philippine­s in 2007, 2011 and 2015.

Tests on two samples show minimum ages of 50,000 years and 67,000 years.

The main exodus of our own species from Africa that all of today’s nonAfrican people are descended from took place around 60,000 years ago.

Analysis of the bones from Luzon led the study authors to conclude they belonged to a previously unknown member of our “Homo” branch of the family tree.

They dubbed the creature Homo luzonensis.

It apparently used stone tools and its small teeth suggest it might have been rather small-bodied, said one of the study authors, Florent Detroit of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris.

H. luzonensis lived in eastern Asia at around the same time as not only our species but other members of the Homo branch, including Neandertha­ls, their little-understood Siberian cousins the Denisovans, and the diminutive “hobbits” of the island of Flores in Indonesia.

There’s no sign that H. luzonensis encountere­d any other member of the Homo group, Detroit said in an email.

But some human relative was on Luzon more than 700,000 years ago, as indicated by the presence of stone tools and a butchered rhino dating to that time, he said. It might have been the newfound species or an ancestor of it, he said in an email.

Detroit said it’s not clear how H. luzonensis is related to other species of Homo.

He speculated that it might have descended from an earlier human relative, Homo erectus, that somehow crossed the sea to Luzon.

H. erectus is generally considered the first Homo species to have expanded beyond Africa, and it plays a prominent role in the convention­al wisdom about evolution outside that continent. Some scientists have suggested that the hobbits on the Indonesian island are descended from H. erectus.

 ?? FLORENT DETROIT/NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 2015 ?? Scientists found a cache of teeth and bones belonging to a new hominin species, luzonensis, at Callao Cave on the island of Luzon in the Philippine­s in 2007, 2011 and 2015.
FLORENT DETROIT/NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 2015 Scientists found a cache of teeth and bones belonging to a new hominin species, luzonensis, at Callao Cave on the island of Luzon in the Philippine­s in 2007, 2011 and 2015.

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