Revised stratigraphy and chronology for Homo floresiensis at Liang Bua in Indonesia
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 07:08 authored by Thomas Sutikna, Matthew W Tocheri, Michael Morwood, E Wahyu Saptomo, - Jatmiko, Rokus Awe Due, Sri Wasisto, Kira Westaway, Maxime Aubert, Bo LiBo Li, J -X Zhao, Michael StoreyMichael Storey, Brent Alloway, Michael Morley, Hanneke JM Meijer, Gerrit van den BerghGerrit van den Bergh, Rainer Grün, Anthony DossetoAnthony Dosseto, Adam Brumm, William L Jungers, Richard RobertsRichard RobertsHomo floresiensis, a primitive hominin species discovered in Late Pleistocene sediments at Liang Bua (Flores, Indonesia)1, 2, 3, has generated wide interest and scientific debate. A major reason this taxon is controversial is because the H. floresiensis-bearing deposits, which include associated stone artefacts2, 3, 4 and remains of other extinct endemic fauna5, 6, were dated to between about 95 and 12 thousand calendar years (kyr) ago2, 3, 7. These ages suggested that H. floresiensis survived until long after modern humans reached Australia by ~50 kyr ago8, 9, 10. Here we report new stratigraphic and chronological evidence from Liang Bua that does not support the ages inferred previously for the H. floresiensis holotype (LB1), ~18 thousand calibrated radiocarbon years before present (kyr cal. bp), or the time of last appearance of this species (about 17 or 13-11 kyr cal. bp)1, 2, 3, 7, 11. Instead, the skeletal remains of H. floresiensis and the deposits containing them are dated to between about 100 and 60 kyr ago, whereas stone artefacts attributable to this species range from about 190 to 50 kyr in age. Whether H. floresiensis survived after 50 kyr ago-potentially encountering modern humans on Flores or other hominins dispersing through southeast Asia, such as Denisovans12, 13-is an open question.
Funding
Astride the Wallace Line 2: human evolution, dispersal, culture and environmental change in Southeast Asia
Australian Research Council
Find out more...Unlocking archives of faunal dispersal and extinction: the key to reconstructing palaeoenvironmental change in Southeast Asia
Australian Research Council
Find out more...The oldest rock art in Asia and the early human occupation of island Southeast Asia
Australian Research Council
Find out more...A world of its own: earliest human occupation of the Maros karsts in Southwest Sulawesi, Indonesia
Australian Research Council
Find out more...Next-generation luminescence dating techniques for Earth and archaeological science applications
Australian Research Council
Find out more...Out of Asia: unique insights into human evolution and interactions using frontier technologies in archaeological science
Australian Research Council
Find out more...History
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