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"Hobbit" Humans Were Diseased, Not New Species, Study Says
National Geographic News ^ | May 18, 2006 | John Roach

Posted on 05/18/2006 3:00:14 PM PDT by nickcarraway

click here to read article


1 posted on 05/18/2006 3:00:17 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
a population of modern humans stricken with a genetic disease that causes small brains

Thus solving the mystery of where liberals come from.

2 posted on 05/18/2006 3:02:10 PM PDT by Argus
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To: nickcarraway

Microcephaly has been the alternate theory, as far as I know, from the very beginning.


3 posted on 05/18/2006 3:04:38 PM PDT by Straight Vermonter (The Stations of the Cross in Poetry ---> http://www.wayoftears.com)
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To: nickcarraway; SunkenCiv
GGG Ping

New research suggests 'hobbit' was not a new species

19:00 18 May 2006
NewScientist.com news service
Adrian Barnett

The debate over whether the "hobbit” fossil found on an Indonesian island is a separate species has reignited, as a new study of dwarfing in a range of mammals suggests that Homo floresiensis was a modern human with a pathological condition.

The remains of a tiny woman were found in a limestone cave in Flores, Indonesia. Named H. floresiensis by the discoverers, she quickly became known as “the hobbit” by everyone else. When the find was reported in 2004 some anthropologists disputed whether it was a new species of human, arguing that the skeleton had characteristics of a modern human with microcephaly, a condition that causes reduced cranium size. Microcephaly is relatively common in isolated populations and is associated with reduced brain function.

Peter Brown and Mike Morwood from the University of New England, Australia, proposed that the 1-metre-tall body (known as LB1) had evolved in an isolated population of Homo erectus as an adaptation to the restricted diet found on an island. But at 380 cubic centimetres, some thought that LB1’s chimp-sized cranial capacity was too small to be a dwarf H. erectus. Brown and Morwood denied this, but their conclusion has now been challenged again.

Species identity

“As they dwarf, species’ brain sizes decline far more slowly than body size,” says Ann MacLarnon from Roehampton University, UK, who modelled dwarfing in a range of mammals from dogs to elephants with a team from the Field Museum, Chicago, US. “Brain size is key to a mammal species’ identity,” she says. There is, for example, hardly any difference in brain size between the smallest modern humans, the 1.4-metre Bambuti people of Congo’s Ituri Forest, and the tallest, the 2-metre Masai of east Africa.

The team calculated that a dwarfed H. erectus with a 400cc brain would weigh just 2 kilograms. “That’s one-tenth of what the Flores people must have weighed,” she explains. The only way to explain the discrepancy, the team believes, is microcephaly.

“It’s perfectly plausible that these were pygmy people. But there’s only one skull, and that is human and microcephalic,” says team leader Robert Martin. This, Martin believes, ties in with the abundance of sophisticated stone tools at the cave. “These were sophisticated people with a high level of mental development,” he says.

“Although we only have one cranium,” says Morwood, “the other bones we found show that LB1 was a normal member of an endemically dwarfed hominid population.” The distinctive traits of reduced body mass, reduced brain size and short thick legs mirror those found in other island endemic populations of large mammals, Morwood says. He calls the microcephaly explanation “bizarre”. It ignores other evidence from Liang Bua and the literature on island endemic evolution, he says.

Journal reference: Science (DOI: 10.1126/science.1121144)

4 posted on 05/18/2006 5:34:24 PM PDT by blam
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To: nickcarraway; blam
Thanks Blam for the ping, and Nick for the topic. Not going to ping it, because this has been a topic at least once before (different source I'm sure) and I just stumbled over it two days or so ago.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
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5 posted on 05/18/2006 10:25:49 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: nickcarraway

this should be interesting. I saw this idea put forward after it was discovered and saw several good arguments made against it.


6 posted on 05/19/2006 11:15:14 AM PDT by bobdsmith
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7 posted on 06/08/2009 7:07:45 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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