EarthDate
On the island of Flores, in Indonesia, a team of anthropologists made a discovery so surprising, they kept it a secret for a year. In a cave called Liang Bua, they had uncovered 100 skeletal fragments of about 14 individuals – so small, that at first, they thought they might be the remains of children. But more investigation showed wisdom teeth and wear on bones that definitively marked these skeletons as adults – and a newly discovered species of hominin, just over 3 feet tall. They called them Homo floresiensis, after the island. But they nicknamed them hobbits, and the moniker stuck. This community of hobbits had lived on Flores from about 100,000 years ago until just 50,000 years ago, then went extinct. More recent discoveries on the island found the hobbits’ even smaller ancestors, who arrived between 1 million and 700,000 years ago, and quickly shrank in size, in a process called island dwarfism, where species get smaller in response to limited resources. Indonesia also once had dwarf elephants and other creatures. But the presence of the hobbits, at a time when Homo sapiens were already well established in Africa, Europe and the Middle East, and venturing into Australasia, shocked the anthropology world. And reminded us that, for hundreds of thousands of years, there were several kinds of successful humans on Earth -- before our kind became the sole survivor.
300 episoder
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