PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Human remains from the Pleistocene-Holocene transition of southwest China suggest a complex evolutionary history for East Asians.

  • Darren Curnoe,
  • Ji Xueping,
  • Andy I R Herries,
  • Bai Kanning,
  • Paul S C Taçon,
  • Bao Zhende,
  • David Fink,
  • Zhu Yunsheng,
  • John Hellstrom,
  • Luo Yun,
  • Gerasimos Cassis,
  • Su Bing,
  • Stephen Wroe,
  • Hong Shi,
  • William C H Parr,
  • Huang Shengmin,
  • Natalie Rogers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031918
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. e31918

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundLater Pleistocene human evolution in East Asia remains poorly understood owing to a scarcity of well described, reliably classified and accurately dated fossils. Southwest China has been identified from genetic research as a hotspot of human diversity, containing ancient mtDNA and Y-DNA lineages, and has yielded a number of human remains thought to derive from Pleistocene deposits. We have prepared, reconstructed, described and dated a new partial skull from a consolidated sediment block collected in 1979 from the site of Longlin Cave (Guangxi Province). We also undertook new excavations at Maludong (Yunnan Province) to clarify the stratigraphy and dating of a large sample of mostly undescribed human remains from the site.Methodology/principal findingsWe undertook a detailed comparison of cranial, including a virtual endocast for the Maludong calotte, mandibular and dental remains from these two localities. Both samples probably derive from the same population, exhibiting an unusual mixture of modern human traits, characters probably plesiomorphic for later Homo, and some unusual features. We dated charcoal with AMS radiocarbon dating and speleothem with the Uranium-series technique and the results show both samples to be from the Pleistocene-Holocene transition: ∼14.3-11.5 ka.Conclusions/significanceOur analysis suggests two plausible explanations for the morphology sampled at Longlin Cave and Maludong. First, it may represent a late-surviving archaic population, perhaps paralleling the situation seen in North Africa as indicated by remains from Dar-es-Soltane and Temara, and maybe also in southern China at Zhirendong. Alternatively, East Asia may have been colonised during multiple waves during the Pleistocene, with the Longlin-Maludong morphology possibly reflecting deep population substructure in Africa prior to modern humans dispersing into Eurasia.