PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Early modern humans and morphological variation in Southeast Asia: fossil evidence from Tam Pa Ling, Laos.

  • Fabrice Demeter,
  • Laura Shackelford,
  • Kira Westaway,
  • Philippe Duringer,
  • Anne-Marie Bacon,
  • Jean-Luc Ponche,
  • Xiujie Wu,
  • Thongsa Sayavongkhamdy,
  • Jian-Xin Zhao,
  • Lani Barnes,
  • Marc Boyon,
  • Phonephanh Sichanthongtip,
  • Frank Sénégas,
  • Anne-Marie Karpoff,
  • Elise Patole-Edoumba,
  • Yves Coppens,
  • José Braga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121193
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e0121193

Abstract

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Little is known about the timing of modern human emergence and occupation in Eastern Eurasia. However a rapid migration out of Africa into Southeast Asia by at least 60 ka is supported by archaeological, paleogenetic and paleoanthropological data. Recent discoveries in Laos, a modern human cranium (TPL1) from Tam Pa Ling's cave, provided the first evidence for the presence of early modern humans in mainland Southeast Asia by 63-46 ka. In the current study, a complete human mandible representing a second individual, TPL 2, is described using discrete traits and geometric morphometrics with an emphasis on determining its population affinity. The TPL2 mandible has a chin and other discrete traits consistent with early modern humans, but it retains a robust lateral corpus and internal corporal morphology typical of archaic humans across the Old World. The mosaic morphology of TPL2 and the fully modern human morphology of TPL1 suggest that a large range of morphological variation was present in early modern human populations residing in the eastern Eurasia by MIS 3.