Homo erectus calvaria from Ngawi (Java) and its evolutionary implications

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Homo erectus calvaria from Ngawi (Java) and its evolutionary implications"

Transcription

1 Anthropological Science Vol. 123(3), , 2015 Homo erectus calvaria from Ngawi (Java) and its evolutionary implications Yousuke Kaifu 1,2 *, Iwan Kurniawan 3, Daisuke Kubo 4, Erick Sudiyabudi 3, Gunawan Pontjo Putro 5, Endang Prasanti 5, Fachroel Aziz 3, Hisao Baba 1 1 Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Nature and Science, Amakubo, Tsukuba-shi, Ibaraki , Japan 2 Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo , Japan 3 Geological Museum, Centre for Geological Survey, Bandung 40122, Indoneisa 4 Faculty of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tennodai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki , Japan 5 Mpu Tantular Museum, Jl. Raya Budran-Jembatan Layang, Sidoarjo 61252, Jawa Timur, Indonesia Received 1 February 2015; accepted 2 July 2015 Abstract Ngawi 1 is an undated but well-preserved Homo erectus calvaria from Java. Previous craniometric and morphological studies have shown its similarities to late Javanese H. erectus from Ngandong as well as Sambungmacan (Sm 1 [and Sm 3]). Some researchers emphasize their morphological homogeneity, and suggest that this Ngandong/Sambungmacan/Ngawi group is morphologically distinct from H. erectus from the Early Pleistocene of Sangiran and Trinil, possibly at a species-level. In this study, we reinvestigated Ngawi 1 based on the newly cleaned original specimen and using microcomputed tomography with the aim of testing if such morphological discontinuity really exists within the Javanese fossil record. We metrically and non-metrically examined 33 cranial characters that are useful to distinguish earlier and later Javanese H. erectus. We also evaluated the morphology of the three Sambungmacan crania (Sm 1, 3, and 4) in the same way. The results of these and multivariate analyses support previous studies that Ngawi 1 exhibits many characteristic features of Ngandong H. erectus. However, Ngawi 1 is more or less similar to earlier Javanese H. erectus in smaller cranial size, a weak but distinct supraglabellar depression, a relatively short temporal bone, limited posterior projection of the middle part of the occipital torus, a shallower and roofed mandibular fossa, and a smaller mastoid process. The three Sambungmacan crania also show general affinities to Ngandong, but are similar to earlier Javanese H. erectus in a few or more characters. Such slightly shifted character distribution is at least consistent with the hypothesis of continuous evolution of H. erectus through the Pleistocene of Java. This minor but potentially meaningful pattern of morphological variation should not be overlooked when a morphological group is defined for the specimens from Ngandong, Sambungmacan, and Ngawi. We also determined the endocranial volume of Ngawi 1 to be 959 cm 3. Key words: Homo erectus, Indonesia, Java, cranial morphology Introduction Ngawi 1 is one of the best-preserved crania of Indonesian (Javanese) Homo erectus. It was recovered by Mr. Catur Hari Gumono, a local student at that time, in 1987 from the Solo River at a location between Selopuro village and Karangtengah village in Ngawi District, East Java. The specimen lacks much of the face but both the cranial vault and base are nearly complete (Figure 1, Figure 2, Figure 3). It has great potential to expand our knowledge about cranial morphological variation and the evolutionary position of the * Correspondence to: Yousuke Kaifu, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Nature and Science, Amakubo, Tsukubashi, Ibaraki , Japan. kaifu@kahaku.go.jp Published online 6 October 2015 in J-STAGE ( DOI: /ase archaic hominin populations in the Pleistocene of Java. The stratigraphic origin and geological age of Ngawi 1 are unknown. Although the possibility of an Upper Pleistocene age has often been emphasized in literature, the published information about local geology suggests that an older age is at least equally likely. In the first announcement of the discovery, Sartono (1991) reported that Pleistocene sediments around the location where Ngawi 1 was found comprises the Lower Pleistocene Pucangan formation and the Upper Pleistocene river terraces. Sartono suggested that the skull probably derived from the latter because its morphology was generally similar to the H. erectus crania from the Ngandong High Terrace. However, he also noted that an older age cannot be completely excluded because the specimen is a surface find. The geology around this area was more recently recorded and mapped by Susanto et al. (1995) and Sudijono et al. (1995), who identified the Lower Middle Pleistocene Kabuh Formation and early Holocene Tambak 2015 The Anthropological Society of Nippon 161

2 162 Y. KAIFU ET AL. Anthropological Science Figure 1. (a) Frontal, (b) posterior, (c) superior, and (d) inferior views of Ngawi 1. Scale bar = 5 cm. Figure 2. (a) Right lateral and (b) left lateral views of Ngawi 1. Scale bar = 5 cm. Formation as dominant components there, with some occurrences of the Lower Pleistocene Pucangan Formation as well as undated terrace deposits several meters above the river. Therefore, a Middle Pleistocene age is another plausible possibility for Ngawi 1. These identifications are, however, based mainly on the lithology of several columnar sections taken at about 5 km upstream from the location where Ngawi 1 was found or a different river nearby. The basis for the proposed chronology is also unclear. More intensive field work is needed to reasonably restrict the age ascribed to Ngawi 1. The morphology of Ngawi 1 has been described in some detail by Sartono (1991), Widianto et al. (2001), Widianto and Zeitoun (2003), Schwartz and Tattersall (2003), and Durband (2007), although detailed descriptions of the mandibular fossa (temporomandibular joint), foramen ovale, and some other cranial base features were not possible because of the remaining matrix. Morphological affinities with other archaic hominin crania have also been investigated by several researchers using different methods. Widianto et al. (2001) compared Ngawi 1 with a large number of Javanese H. erectus specimens from the Early (Trinil, Sangiran) and Middle Upper (Sambungmacan, Ngandong) Pleistocene contexts both non-metrically and metrically (univariate analyses of linear measurements). They concluded that Ngawi 1 is a member of Ngandong

3 Vol. 123, 2015 HOMO ERECTUS FROM NGAWI, JAVA 163 Figure 3. Surface-rendered images generated from the micro-ct scan of Ngawi 1. and Sambungmacan group of H. erectus mainly because of the shared high and rounded vault shapes and a few other surface characters. Widianto and Zeitoun (2003) and Zeitoun et al. (2010) conducted cladistic analyses using 123 morphological and 345 metrical features and reached the same conclusion as Widianto et al. (2001), although unknown intercharacter correlations are a potentially significant source of error in this type of analysis. Zeitoun et al. (2010) also conducted a 3-D geometric morphometric analysis based on 17 calvarial landmarks. The PC1 that accounts for 48.8% of the total variation clearly distinguished Kenyan, Chinese, and Javanese H. erectus (sensu lato) as well as Ngawi 1 from a cluster of modern humans and most of the post-erectus grade archaic Homo. The PC2 (8.6%) and PC3 (6.6%) were of some use to examine variation within H. erectus (sensu lato). Ngawi and Sm 3 are closer to Sangiran (S 17 and Bukuran) rather than to Ngandong in PC2, but cluster with Ngandong in PC3. However, these authors a priori included Ngawi 1 and Sm 3 in their Ngandong series and failed to recognize their differences from Ngandong in PC2. Durband (2002, 2007) agreed with the view put forward by Zeitoun and Widianto. He described the morphology of the cranial base and noted that Ngawi 1 is similar to the specimens from Sambungmacan and Ngandong in exhibiting a marked postcondyloid tuberosity, development of the opisthionic recess, and mandibular fossa (TMJ) morphology (the squamotympanic fissure located at the deepest part of the fossa), although the last assessment was tentative due to the remaining matrix. Schwartz and Tattersall (2005) offered a view largely similar to but slightly different from the above suggestion for morphological homogeneity within the Ngandong/ Sambungmacan/Ngawi group. Based on descriptive comparisons, these authors recognized that Ngawi 1 and Sambungmacan (Sm 1, 3) are similar to each other, but differ from Ngandong, showing slightly smaller brain cases, less marked temporal lines, and limited posterior projection of the occipital torus. Nonetheless, they concluded that the three assemblages share many other similarities and can be grouped together into the single Ngandong/Sambungmacan/ Ngawi morph. Slight differences in cranial vault shape between Sambungmacan/Ngawi and Ngandong are also seen in the multivariate metric analysis by Durband (2006: fig. 1). Finally, Baab (2010) examined a cast of Ngawi 1 in her intensive study on cranial shape variation within a relatively large sample of Asian H. erectus (Zhuokoudian, Sangiran, Sambungmacan, Ngandong, and Ngawi 1) using the 3-D geometric morphometric technique. Although Baab found subtle shape differences between the Sambungmacan/ Ngawi fossils and those from Ngandong, she concluded that [t]he results of this study do not provide strong support for a linear progression in neurocranial shape from Sangiran to Ngandong via Sambungmacan/Ngawi. Rather, this study found greater support for a Ngandong/Sambungmacan/ Ngawi group. In summary, the general consensus emerging from these previous analyses is that Ngawi 1 is a member of Javanese H. erectus and is particularly similar to a chronologically later group of it (Ngandong and Sambungmacan) (see also Howell, 1999; Wolpoff, 1999; Durband, 2006; Indriati and Antón, 2010; Balzeau, 2013; Rightmire, 2013). In this framework, some researchers emphasize morphological similarities among Ngawi, Sambungmacan, and Ngandong

4 164 Y. KAIFU ET AL. Anthropological Science to erect the Ngandong/Sambungmacan/Ngawi group (or morph) and highlight its morphological distinction from the chronologically earlier Sangiran/Trinil group of Javanese H. erectus (Widianto and Zeitoun, 2003; Durband, 2008; Baab, 2010; Zeitoun et al., 2010; Grimaud-Hervé et al., 2012). Based on such recognition, some of them even propose species-level distinction between the two groups: the earlier H. erectus and later H. soloensis (Widianto and Zeitoun, 2003; Schwartz and Tattersall, 2005; Durband, 2008; Zeitoun et al., 2010). This raises the following question: if the two chronological samples are so distinct from each other, do they still support continuous evolution of the H. erectus population lineage through the Pleistocene in Java, or does it indicate a new immigration and replacement of the population there? Although a few morphological differences between Ngawi/ Sambungmacan and Ngandong have been noted (Schwartz and Tattersall, 2005; Baab, 2010), their potential evolutionary significance are rarely discussed. In addition, based on different sets of the fossil sample, other researchers found evidence for the gradual acquisition of Ngandong-like cranial features since the terminal Early Pleistocene in Java (Baba et al., 2003, 2007; Kaifu et al., 2008, 2011a; Aziz and Baba, 2013). In our view, a more comprehensive documentation of cranial morphological variation is needed before we conclude about morphological affinities of Ngawi 1 and the distinction between the chronologically earlier and later archaic populations in Java. Establishing a reliable chronology for individual fossil specimens is also essential. Given this background, the purpose of this paper is to contribute to the question of cranial morphological variation by extracting more detailed information from the Ngawi skull. We have cleaned the sediments attached to Ngawi 1 in 2012, and a detailed observation on its base is now therefore possible. Although the previous craniometric analyses were effective at determining the overall cranial shape variation, many other detailed characters still remain to be investigated. Kaifu et al. (2008) compiled 33 cranial traits that differ between the earlier and later Javanese H. erectus (their Table 7). In the present study, we make use of this trait list to evaluate more comprehensively the morphological status of Ngawi 1 as well as the three Sambungmacan crania, before examining its overall cranial shape by a multivariate analysis of linear measurements. In order to do so, we use a comparative sample that includes most of the existing cranial specimens from Java and is larger than those used in the previous studies (see below). We also obtained a high-resolution micro-computed tomography (micro-ct) scan of Ngawi 1, which enables us to measure precisely its endocranial volume (ECV). The ECV of Ngawi 1 has been uncertain: Sartono (1991) inferred it to be ~1000 cm 3, whereas a more recent estimate by Widianto and Zeitoun (2003) was 870 cm 3. Materials and Methods Materials We cleaned, observed, measured, and photographed the original Ngawi 1 specimen at the Mpu Tantular Museum in Sidoarjo, Indonesia, in We compared Ngawi 1 with adult H. erectus crania from Java. These are from Sangiran (S 2, 3, 4, 10, 12, 17, 26, 27, 38, IX; Bukuran, Bp 9408, Bu 9604), Trinil (Trinil 2), Sambungmacan (Sm 1, 3, 4), and Ngandong (Ng 1, 3, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12 (the specimen numbers follow the formal system reported by Jacob, 1975a)). All these sites are located in the Solo River basin (Sambungmacan, Trinil, Ngawi, Ngandong) or its proximity (Sangiran), and are close to each other (within less than 80 km). The original specimens were examined and measured at the Geological Museum (Bandung), Institute of Technology (Bandung), Gadjah Mada University (Yogyakarta), Senckenberg Research Institute (Frankfurt am Main), and Naturalis Biodiversity Center (Leiden) (Kaifu et al., 2008, 2011a). The Sangiran and Trinil specimens are from the Early Pleistocene (~1.6 or Ma: Larick et al., 2001; Hyodo et al., 2011). The Sangiran series are sampled from a stratigraphic zone spanning over years. This entire collection can be further divided into two chronological subgroups by the stratigraphic boundary set at the top of the Grenzbank zone. Although this is an arbitrarily defined boundary, there are considerable morphological differences between the lower and upper assemblages in terms of dental, mandibular, and cranial morphology (Kaifu et al., 2005, 2010), probably as a result of anagenetic local evolution (Baab, 2010). The lower group was labeled the Grenzbank/Sangiran (Grenzbank zone and Sangiran Formation) assemblage and the upper group the Bapang-AG (Bapang Formation above the Grenzbank zone) assemblage by Kaifu et al. (2005). The former currently represents the earliest Javanese H. erectus, and the latter can be called early Javanese H. erectus. Cranial morphology and some other evidence suggest that Sangiran 2, and probably Trinil 2 as well, derived from the Grenzbank/Sangiran level and thus belong to the earliest group (Kaifu et al., 2010), but this classification remains tentative at the present stage of the research. The Ngandong series is from the Ngandong High Terrace, and is generally dated to the early Late Pleistocene (Yokoyama et al., 2008; Huffman et al., 2010), although controversy still continues about their exact dates (Indriati et al., 2011). This assemblage can be called late Javanese H. erectus. Contrary to the widely held assumption that Sambungmacan is contemporaneous with Ngandong (Swisher et al., 1996; Yokoyama et al., 2008), we stress that none of the H. erectus specimens from Sambungmacan have been securely dated. There is a recent suggestion that at least one of the Sambungmacan crania (Sm 4) is from the Middle Pleistocene context (Kaifu et al., 2011b). Because of this, we do not include this sample in any of the above three chronological groups (earliest, early, and late Javanese H. erectus). Metric and non-metric comparisons We first examine individual cranial traits of Ngawi 1, focusing mainly on the 33 characters that differ between the earlier and later Javanese H. erectus (Kaifu et al., 2008: Table 7). Such a traditional trait-by-trait comparison is essential because it can include fragmentary specimens to increase the sample size, and many of these traits cannot be captured by ordinary linear measurement-based multivariate analyses or geometric morphometric analyses focusing on

5 Vol. 123, 2015 HOMO ERECTUS FROM NGAWI, JAVA 165 Ngawi Table 1. Cranial measurements of Ngawi 1 Definition [M57, H73, K08] a Cranial vault length Max. cranial length (GOL)* 187 Glabella opisthocranion [1,GOL,1] Cranial vault breadth Postorbital breadth (POBB)* Min. transverse breadth across the frontal squama [9(1),,4] Max. frontal breadth (XFB) 117 Max. transverse breadth across the frontal squama [10,XFB,5] Min. frontal breadth (WFRB) 95 Measured between the superior lines when the temporal line is split into the superior and inferior branches [~9,,6] Bistephanic breadth (BSTB) Stephanion stephanion. As above [~10b,~STB,7] Squamosal suture breadth (SQSB)* 140 The posterior end of the squamosal suture is defined at the posterior tip of the supramastoid crest [8c,,8] Max. biparietal breadth (XBPB)* 140 Max. horizontal breadth across the parietals. Occasionally identical to the SQSB [,,9] Supramastoid breadth (SMCB)* 147 Max. breadth across the supramastoid crests [~8,~XCB,10] Biasterionic breadth (ASB)* Asterion asterion [12,ASB,11] Biradicular breadth (BRAB)* Radiculare radiculare [11b,AUB,13] Max. mastoid breadth (BMTB)* 132 Max. breadth across the mastoid crests [13(1),,16] Cranial vault height Basion bregma height (BBH) Basion-bregma [~17,BBH,18] Porion bregma height (PBRH)* 102 Height from the line connecting the poria [20,,19] Chord and arc Glabella bregma chord (GLBC)* 102 Glabella bregma [,,23] Parietal chord (PAC)* 96 Bregma lambda [30,PAC,25] Lambda asterion chord (LASC) 83.5 Lambda asterion [30(3),,27] Occipital chord (OCC)* 83.5 Lambda opisthion [31,OCC,28] Lambda opisthocranion chord 54 Lamda opisthocranion [,,30] (LOPC)* Lambda inion chord (LINC) 55.5 Distance from lambda to the arc connecting the superiormost points of the right and left superior nuchal lines [,, ] Opisthocranion opisthion chord 51 Opisthocranion opisthion [,,31] (OPOC)* Inion opisthion chord (INOP) 49.5 Distance from opisthion to the arc connecting the superiormost points of the right and left superior nuchal lines [,, ] Lateral cranial wall Temporal muscle attachment length (TMAL)* 120 Greatest anteroposterior distance of the attachment area of the temporal muscle to the temporal wall. Measured from behind the supraorbital crest to the anterior margin of the angular torus [,,35] Temporal muscle attachment height (TMAH) 67.5 Greatest height between the superior temporal line and the auriclare. Perpendicular to the axis of the temporal muscle attachment length [,,36] Temporal squama length (TSQL) 62.5 Anteroposterior length of the temporal squama projected to the Frankfurt Horizontal [4b,,38] Temporal squama height (TSQH) 29 Distance between the auriclare and squamosal suture, perpendicular to the Frankfurt Horizontal [19b,,39] Parietomastoid suture length 27 Chord length of the parietomastoid suture [,,40] (PMSL)* Entire temporal bone length (ETBL) 89.5 Sum of the temporal squama length and parietomastoid suture length [,,41] SMC MC distance (SMCD) 19 Minimum distance between the high ridges of the supramastoid and mastoid crests [,,42] Cranial base Sphenobasion opisthion length 64 Sphenobasion opisthion [,,44] Length of basal temporal (LBTM) 55 Distance between the anterior root of the zygomatic process of the temporal bone and the posterior wall of the mastoid process, projected to a sagittal plane. Mandibular fossa width (29) Max. breadth of the articular surface [,, ] Mandibular fossa depth 11.5 Greatest vertical depth of the fossa floor from the line bisecting the fossa and tangent to the the articular eminence and tympanic [,,46] Transverse tympanic width 31 Transverse maximum length of the tympanic, projected to a line perpenducular to the sagittal plane [,,47] Basilar length 21 Sphenobasion basion [6,,48] Foramen magnum length 42.5 Midsagittal inner length [7,~FOL,49] Foramen magnum breadth 28 Max. transverse inner breadth [16,,50] Facial breadth Supraorbital torus breadth (SOTB)* 114 Maximum chord distance across the supraorbital torus at or above the frontomarale temporale [,,3] Inner biorbital breadth (FMB) Frontomalare anterior frontomalare anterior [43a,FMB, ] Supraorbital torus SOT thickness (midorbit) (SOTT3)* 13.2 Supraorbital torus thickness at the midorbital level [,, ] SOT thickness (lateral) (SOTT5)* 15.9 Supraorbital torus thickness at the lateral quarter point of the superior orbital margin [,, ] a Corresponding metric codes for Martin s methods (Bräuer, 1988), Howells (1973), and Kaifu et al. (2008) are in parentheses. *Measurements used in the PCA.

6 166 Y. KAIFU ET AL. Anthropological Science overall cranial shape. Where possible, we evaluate these individual traits numerically through univariate or bivariate comparisons of craniometric data. In order to summarize the overall cranial morphology of Ngawi 1, we also perform principal component analyses (PCAs) using 19 size-adjusted measurements (indicated by asterisks in Table 1) taken from 13 well-preserved crania. Each of these measurements is divided by the individual s neurocranial size variable which is defined as the cubic root of maximum cranial length average of six breadths (supraorbital torus breadth, postorbital breadth, squamosal suture breadth, biradicular breadth, supramastoid breadth, and biasterionic breadth) porion bregma height. The correlation matrices are used to calculate PCs. Finally, we test allometry in the individual metric traits and PCs by examining correlations between these and the neurocranial size variable. In order to discuss the taxonomic significance of these characters and components, it is important to know if they differ between the earlier and later Javanese H. erectus as a result of the cranial size increase or not. Such tests are occasionally performed using a heterogeneous hominin fossil sample that includes groups with different average sizes (e.g. Antón et al., 2007), but such an analysis may lead to an erroneous result. This is because two groups sharing the same scaling principle (common slope value) may differ in intercept value (Martin et al., 2005). A slope calculated from such a heterogeneous sample tends to be artificially steeper than the original scaling relationship. Additionally, when we are dealing with a sample that is known to show chronological size increase, any linear, chronological shape change would correlate with size even if that change occurred independently of size. This is clearly the case for the Sangiran/Trinil and Ngandong cranial series, which show significant size difference. Because of these reasons, we here focus on a temporally and spatially restricted, single population sample from Ngandong. However, this choice limits the available sample size (n = 5), and thus our analysis is preliminary. CT scan and endocranial volume (ECV) measurement A high-resolution CT scan of Ngawi 1 was obtained by using the microfocus X-ray CT system TXS320-ACTIS (Tesco Co.), at the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, in June The scan of the entire calvaria was taken at 160 kv and 0.3 ma with a 1.5 mm thick copper plate prefilter to lessen beam-hardening effects. Other scanning parameters include a matrix, 340 micron pixel size, and a 340 micron slice thickness and interval. Using this CT data, we calculated the ECV of Ngawi 1 as described below. First, we virtually separated the fossil bone (with matrices) from the air by half-maximum-height thresholding between the CT values for bone and air (Kubo et al., 2008, 2011), and then removed the attached matrices from the endocranial surface using Amira software (FEI) (Figure 4a, b). These matrices, which account for 67 cm 3, were distinguishable from the fossil bone by their higher intensities in the CT image. The endocranial surface of Ngawi 1 is essentially intact except for the missing midanterior cranial fossa (frontal rostrum) and the damaged dorsum sellae. To restore these missing portions, we digitally transplanted the corresponding endocranial surfaces from two other Javanese H. erectus skulls that preserve these portions, Sm 4 (dorsum sellae) and Ng 7 (frontal rostrum) (Figure 4c). Micro-CT scans of these latter specimens were Figure 4. The process of endocranial volume calculation. Endocranial cavities of the Ngawi 1 skull before (a) and after (b) the digital removal of the matrices (marked in gray in a). (c) The reconstructed basal endocranial surface of Ngawi 1, with the portions transplanted from Ng 7 and Sm 4 encircled by dotted lines. See text for more details.

7 Vol. 123, 2015 HOMO ERECTUS FROM NGAWI, JAVA 167 Figure 5. Micro-CT sections of Ngawi 1: (a) a coronal section passing near the bregma, and (b) the mid-sagittal section. taken in 2006 at the University Museum, The University of Tokyo. After virtual removal of the matrices from Ng 7 using Amira software, we reconstructed polygonal endocranial models of Ng 7, Sm 4, and Ngawi 1 from each CT scan using Analyze software (Biomedical Imaging Resource, Mayo Clinic). Using Geomagic XOS software (3D Systems), we then manually superimposed the three virtual endocasts, without size scaling, to obtain smooth continuity of the endocranial surfaces around the missing portions of Ngawi 1, before the relevant portions were cut out from Sm 4 (dorsum sellae) and Ng 7 (frontal rostrum) to merge onto the Ngawi 1 endocast. For this purpose, the anterior left and posterior right quarters of the surface of Ng 7 were discarded and replaced by mirror images from their opposite sides (anterior right and posterior left quarters, respectively) to improve the surface continuity. Although we are aware that there are methods to mathematically align fragmented endocranial surfaces to obtain smooth continuity (e.g. Kikuchi and Ogihara, 2013), errors derived from different choices of methods would be limited for the above transplant of small patches. Basic Information Preservation, osteomeric landmarks, age, and pathology The cranial vault is complete except for slight surface abrasion as well as damage at the right angular torus. Both zygomatic processes are broken. The facial skeleton is missing below the superior orbital margins and from a point ~8 mm inferior to the nasion. The cranial base is wellpreserved although the ethmoid bone, much of the basal structures/surfaces of the sphenoid, and the occipital condyles are broken on both sides, and the region around basion is damaged. Most of the cranial sutures remain unfused and are clearly visible on the external surfaces, suggesting that the individual was a younger adult. Osteometric landmarks defined by the sutures can be located without difficulty, although the sutural pattern is relatively complex at the asterion. The metopic suture is present in the posterior one-third of the frontal squama, but its posterior end does not coincide with the anterior end of the sagittal suture (Figure 1c). We located the bregma at the midpoint between these two points. The anterior margin of the foramen magnum is damaged. We reconstructed the missing basion by putting a small amount of molding clay on this part. Many of the Javanese H. erectus skulls show signs of healed trauma or trauma-like depressions on their superior vault surfaces (Weidenreich, 1951; Márquez et al., 2001; Baba et al., 2003; Indriati, 2006). Such traces are not evident in Ngawi 1. Distortion There is obvious distortion in the cranial vault of Ngawi 1. Viewed posteriorly (Figure 1b, Figure 3c), the vault s midline is inclined ~3.5 relative to a line perpendicular to the cranial base toward the right side. Accordingly, the right lateral cranial wall stands vertically, whereas the left wall is inclined medially. Widianto and Zeitoun (2003) regarded this as taphonomic distortion. However, both the original specimen and micro-ct scan (Figure 5) indicate no signs of cracking or crushing in any part of the cranial bones including those fragile parts such as the cranial base, greater wings of the sphenoid bone, and orbital roofs. There are several asymmetric features that were obviously present before the individual s death: the metopic and sagittal sutures are out of alignment as described above (Figure 1c), and the supramastoid crest is more marked on the left than on the right side as seen in Figure 1c and Figure 3d, probably as a result of the different inclinations of the right and left temporal muscles. Moreover, in posterior view (Figure 1b, Figure 3c) the external occipital crest runs vertically below the nuchal crest and the diagonal cranial distortion is restricted to the upper part of the vault. Therefore, the diagonal cranial distortion was originally present during the life of this individual. We failed to find any signs of taphonomic distortion in Ngawi 1. Comparative Morphological Description Our measurements of Ngawi 1 are reported in Table 1. In this section, we describe the morphology of Ngawi 1 with particular emphasis on the 33 traits that differ between the younger Sangiran (Bapang-AG, or early Japanese H. erectus) and Ngandong H. erectus cranial assemblages. Figure 6 and Figure 7 are plots of selected measurements that support some of our assessments. The original accounts and references for each of these 33 characters are available in

8 168 Y. KAIFU ET AL. Anthropological Science Figure 6. Comparison of neurocranial size variable defined in the methods section of the text. Symbols (color-coded in the online version of this paper): G (violet) = Ngawi; N (green) = Ngandong; m (red) = Sambungmacan; S (blue) = Bapang-AG; S (black) = Grenzbank/ Sangiran; T (black) = Trinil 2. The subscripts denote the specimen numbers or names. Table 7 of Kaifu et al. (2008). We also update the character states for the three Sambungmacan specimens from Table 8 in Kaifu et al. (2008), based on the slightly expanded comparative sample used in the present study (Table 2). In the following text, we do not address every detail about the morphologies of these Sambungmacan specimens. Supporting metric data for our assessments in Table 2 are shown in Figure 6 and Figure 7, and descriptions and illustrations of these specimens are available in various studies (e.g. Jacob, 1973; Rightmire, 1990; Delson et al., 2001; Márquez et al., 2001; Kaifu et al., 2008; Kurniawan et al., 2013). The numbers in square brackets in the following text indicates the number of the character in Table 2. The 33 cranial traits [1] The ECV of Ngawi 1, calculated from the micro-ct data, is cm 3. This figure is within the ranges of variation estimated for Bapang-AG ( cm 3 : Holloway, 1981; Kaifu et al., 2011a) and Sambungmacan ( cm 3 : Jacob, 1973; Broadfield et al., 2001; Baba et al., 2003), but is smaller than the Ngandong crania series ( cm 3 : Holloway, 1980). When the neurocranial size variables are compared (Figure 6), Ngawi 1 falls in the midrange of variation exhibited by Sangiran or Sambungmacan, whereas it is slightly smaller than the smallest cranium from Ngandong (Ng 7). [3, 4, 7] In terms of shape relative to overall cranial breadth or length, the vaults of Ngandong are [3] distinctly wider at the frontal squama (Figure 7a), [4] slightly wider at the temporal squama (Figure 7b), and [7] distinctly higher (Figure 7c, d) than in the Bapang-AG conditions. Ngawi 1 is within the ranges of variation for Ngandong in the first and last characters, but falls in the overlapping zone between Ngandong and Bapang-AG for the second character. However, in all of these cranial shape characters, the metric trends observed in Ngawi are close to the lowest figures for Ngandong and are not very different from some of the Bapang-AG specimens such as Sangiran 17. The three Sambungmacan crania are largely similar to Ngandong in the above shape traits with the notable exception that Sm 4 exhibits a very low relative vault height that is close to the Bapang-AG condition. [11] Ngawi has weak but distinct frontal eminences on its frontal squama, a structure that is variably developed in Ngandong and Sambungmacan but is lacking or indistinct in the Sangiran/Trinil specimens. It should be noted, however, that the eminence in Ngawi is not as marked as that for Ng 7, one of the Ngandong crania with similar overall size to Ngawi. The small calvaria from Sambungmacan, Sm 3, also has stronger frontal eminences than in Ngawi. [12] Unlike the cases in Sangiran/Trinil (Trinil 2, S 17, S IX, Bukuran, Bp 9408, and probably S 27 (Indriati and Antón, 2008)), the supraglabellar region of Ngandong shows no or only slight depression (supraglabellar depression) and is sloping backward and upward to smoothly continue to the frontal squama surface (see Weidenreich, 1951: fig. 24; Santa Luca, 1980: figs. 7 12). In other words, the region is filled with bone, making the right and left supratoral planes discontinuous, whereas a supraglabellar depression in the Sangiran/Trinil crania bridges the right and left segments to form a transversely continuous supratoral plane. The morphology of Ngawi 1 is intermediate between these two conditions: it shows a weak but distinct supraglabellar depression (Figure 5b). Sm 1 probably had a similar morphology to Ngawi in this respect, although the supraglabellar region is incomplete in this specimen. [13] The supraorbital torus of Ngandong is thin medially and thick laterally, while the torus in Sangiran/Trinil is typically thin laterally or maintains similar thicknesses throughout (S 17). The torus of Ngawi 1 shows lateral thickening like Ngandong (Figure 7e). [14] Viewed superiorly, the glabellar region of Ngawi 1 is depressed posteriorly as is typical for Ngandong, without forming an anteriorly protruding glabellar prominence. [15] The distance between the glabella and nasion is comparable to those in Ngandong. [18, 19] The parietal bone surface of the Bapang-AG and other Sangiran/Trinil crania is characterized by transverse flattening on its posterior part as well as its smooth continuation with occipital bone at the lambda region, whereas the posterior parietal surface is swollen and the area in front of the lambda is depressed (postobelion depression) in Ngandong. Ngawi shares the latter characteristics with Ngandong (Figure 5a). [20] The angular torus of Ngandong is an extensive, vertically high, triangular eminence, with degree of projection varying from slight or moderate (Ngandong 3, 5, 7, 9) to pronounced (Ngandong 1, 6, 10, 11, 12). The tori of Sangiran/Trinil Homo erectus are generally small, rounded mounds except for the case in Skull IX (Kaifu et al., 2011a). The undamaged left torus of Ngawi 1 is a moderately large mound that is comparable to those in Skull IX in size, and is also similar to those in Ngandong as previously described (Widianto et al., 2001). [21] Compared to Bapang-AG, the temporal bones of Ngandong are long anteroposteriorly, both absolutely and relatively to the maximum cranial length. Although the temporal bone of Ng 6 is relatively short, the Ngandong and Sangiran samples form separate clusters in the plot of Figure 7f, with Sambungmacan specimens distributed in between them. Ngawi 1 has a short temporal bone and clearly clusters with the Sangiran specimens in this plot. [22, 23] The

9 Vol. 123, 2015 HOMO ERECTUS FROM NGAWI, JAVA 169 Figure 7. Bivariate plots of cranial measurements (in mm). Symbols as in Figure 6. Isometric lines are indicated for selected plots. temporal bone of Ngandong is characterized by a combination of a relatively short squama and a long parietomastoid suture, a condition that is shared by a few (Skull IX, Bukuran) but not all of the Bapang-AG crania (Figure 7g). When the ratio of parietomastoid suture relative to the entire temporal bone length (temporal squama length + parietomastoid

10 170 Y. KAIFU ET AL. Anthropological Science Table 2. Major cranial characteristics of Ngandong as compared to Bapang-AG (Upper Sangiran) and statuses of Ngawi 1 and the three Sambungmacan crania a Ngandong compared to Bapang-AG Ngawi 1 Sm 1 Sm 3 Sm 4 Overall size and shape 1 Overall size large (Figure 6) B B-N B B-N 3 Frontal squama very wide (postorbital constriction weak: Figure 7a) N N N >N 4 Wide at the posterior temporal squamous area (variable: Figure 7b) B-N B-N B-N B-N 7 High relative to length and breadth (Figure 7c, d) N N B-N B Frontal bone 11 Frontal eminence distinct N N N N 12 No supraglabellar depression with right and left supratoral planes discontinuous int. int. N N 13 Supraorbital torus thicker laterally, and thinner medially (Figure 7e) N int. N int. 14 Glabellar region depressed posteriorly (variable) N? N N 15 Nasion widely separated from glabella N?? N Parietal bone 18 Posterior surface moderately swollen in a transverse section N N N N 19 Postobelion depression present N N N N 20 Angular torus extensive and plateau-like (variable) B-N N B-N N Temporal bone 21 Long (absolutely and relatively) (Figure 7f) B N N? int.? 22 and 23 Temporal squama short and parietomastoid suture long (Figure 7g) B-N B >N B-N 24 Supramastoid crest inclines strongly upward N N N N 25 Supramastoid sulcus wide (variable) N N N B-N Occipital bone 26 Occipital plane (upper scale) very long (absolutely and relatively) (Figure 7h) N B-N N B-N? 27 Occipital plane (upper scale) stands more vertically N N N B-N 29 Midoccipital torus projected posteriorly (variable) B B-N B N 30 Lower arm of occipital torus stronger than the upper (variable) N B-N N B-N 31 The attachment surfaces for the right and left semispinalis capitis and superior oblique muscles flat and aligned on the same posteriorly facing plane N N N N Temporal muscle attachment 32 Right and left temporal lines widely separated (Figure 7i) N N N N 33 Posteriormost point of the temporal line situated anteriorly (Figure 7j) N B B-N N 34 Temporal gutter deep and faces inferiorly N N N? N Cranial base 36 Tympanic plate transversely short N N N int. 37 Midcranial base region long (absolutely and relatively) (Figure 7k) N N N N 38 Mandibular fossa morphology specialized int. int. N int. 39 Tympanomastoid fissure pronounced N B-N? N N 40 Mastoid process large and triangular int.? N int. 41 Postcondyloid tuberosity prominent N? N N 42 Opisthionic recess present N? N? N 43 Digastric fossa narrow w. juxtamastoid crest sharp and prominent N N N int. a Those characters showing differences between Bapang-AG and Ngandong are selected from Table 7 of Kaifu et al. (2008). The characters 8, 9, and 16 in the original table (frontal breadth and length, parietal length) are omitted because they largely reflect the variation in overall cranial size (Character 1). See the original table for references of each character. Each symbol indicates if the specimen is within or outside the ranges of variation for Bapang-AG and Ngandong as follows: B, within Bapang-AG but outside Ngandong; N, within Ngandong but outside Bapang-AG; B-N: within the overlapping zone of Ngandong and Bapang-AG; int. outside but in between Bapang-AG and Ngandong; >N, similar to but outside Ngandong;?, status unclear. suture length) is compared, the values for S 2, S 10, and S 17 are 13 18%, whereas those for S IX (28%) and Bukuran (31%) are close to or within the variations of Ngandong (29 32%: n = 5) as well as Sambungmacan (24 35%). Ngawi 1 (30%) shows a combination similar to Ngandong in this respect. [24] The orientation of the supramastoid crest differs between Ngandong and Sangiran. The crest of Ngawi 1 bends upwards above the mastoid process as in Ngandong, and its intersection with the squamosal suture is at a high position relative to the parietomastoid suture. [25] The width of the supramastoid sulcus varies both in Bapang-AG (7 14 mm or % relative to the supramastoid breadth), Sambungmacan (12 17 mm, %), and Ngandong (8 18 mm, %), but those in the latter sample tend to be wider than the former. The sulcus width in Ngawi 1 (19 mm, 12.9%) allies it with the latter sample. It should be

11 Vol. 123, 2015 noted, however, that one of the earliest Javanese H. erectus crania from the Grenzbank/Sangiran level, S 4, has a wide supramastoid sulcus (21 mm, 14.3%) (Santa Luca, 1980; Antón, 2002; Kaifu et al., 2008). [26, 27] The absolutely and relatively long midsagittal length of the occipital upper scale (Figure 7h), and the nearly vertical orientation of this surface in lateral view are another set of characteristic features of Ngandong. Ngawi 1 is different from the typical Bapang-AG condition, and more similar to Ngandong in these respects. [29] Posterior development of the occipital torus varies both in Bapang-AG and Ngandong, but the latter show stronger development of this structure. The torus of Ngawi 1 is more modest than in the weakest torus in Ngandong (Ng 7): it is moderately thick vertically and does not show marked posterior projection. [30] In Ngandong, behind the mastoid process, the lower arm of the occipital torus shows remarkable development, whereas this structure is not very distinct in the Sangiran/ Trinil crania except for S 17. The lower arm is welldeveloped in Ngawi 1. [31] One remarkable characteristic of the Ngandong series is that the nuchal plane does not show general convexity but the attachment surfaces for the right and left semispinalis capitis and superior oblique muscles are flat and aligned on the same posteriorly facing plane. Ngawi 1 is similar to Ngandong in this respect. [32] In Ngandong, the right and left temporal lines are widely separated from each other partly because of their expanded cranial dimensions, as seen in their considerably greater minimum frontal and bistephanic breadths (Figure 7i). These measurements are also large in Ngawi 1 despite its comparatively small cranial size. [33] In Ngandong, the area for temporal muscle attachment is relatively short antero posteriorly (Figure 7j), and the temporal line is wellseparated from the lamboidal suture to give a commodious space in between for an extensive angular torus. Figure 7j indicates that Ngawi 1 also had a somewhat anteriorly shifted posterior temporal muscle. [34] The temporal gutter of Ngawi 1 faces distinctly inferiorly. It is deeply grooved like the cases in Ngandong. [36] Ngandong samples show a number of characteristic features in their cranial base. Interestingly, the tympanic plate of Ngandong is transversely shorter (30 34 mm) than those of the Sangiran crania (37 42 mm), despite the former s large cranial sizes. The plate of Ngawi 1 measures 31 mm, and is within the Ngandong range of variation. [37] Ngandong is also distinct in having absolutely and relatively long midcranial base. In the plot relevant to this trait (Figure 7k), Ngawi 1 clusters with Ngandong. [38] The mandibular fossa is unique in Ngandong (Weidenreich, 1951; Durband, 2002, 2008; Baba et al., 2003) as well as Sm 3 (Márquez et al., 2001; Delson et al., 2001). In this group, the fossa is deep and anteroposteriorly short; the postglenoid process shows minimal or no development; the entire squamous portion of the fossa inclines posterosuperiorly so that its deepest part occurs along the squamotympanic fissure, whereas in the Bapang-AG, as well as other fossil and extant hominins, the squamous part of the temporal bone forms a concave fossa roof in front of the squamotympanic fissure (Figure 8). It has been claimed that a few of the Ngandong specimens, Ng 7 and Ng 10, show more nor- HOMO ERECTUS FROM NGAWI, JAVA 171 mal fossa configurations (Mowbray et al., 2002). Durband (2008) suggested that this is partly affected by taphonomic deformation, and noted that the fossa floor of Ng 7 is flat rather than concave. We found no evidence of deformation in our micro-ct scan of the right fossa of Ng 7 (Figure 8). Its flat fossa roof is original, but the fossa is deeper than seen in the Bapang-AG specimens (S 17, Bukuran) as well as Sm 1 and Sm 4. Ngawi 1 also has a flat-roofed mandibular fossa Figure 8. Sagittal micro-ct sections of the mandibular fossa of the representative H. erectus specimens from Java and Ngawi 1. The sections on the right column were taken just medial to the lateral edge of the tympanic plate as indicated in the left column. Each cranium is oriented according to the Frankfurt Horizontal. Arrows indicate the position of the squamotympanic fissure. The articular eminence of Ng 7 is broken at the location indicated by x. Not to scale.

12 172 Y. KAIFU ET AL. Anthropological Science with no distinct postglenoid process (Figure 3e and Figure 8; contra Durband, 2007), but the fossa of this specimen is anteroposteriorly more extensive and less deep than in Ngandong. The mandibular fossa depth of Ngawi 1 (11 mm) is closer to the figures for the Bapang-AG specimens (9 10 mm) but less than those of Ngandong (13 16 mm). Together with Sm 1 (personal observation; contra Durband, 2007, 2008) and Sm 4 (Baba et al., 2003), the mandibular fossa of Ngawi 1 is intermediate between the morphological variations seen in Ngandong and Bapang-AG. [39] Between the inferiorly projecting tympanic plate and mastoid process, the tympanomastoid fissure is wide in Ngandong. Ngawi 1 shares this morphology. [40] The mastoid processes of Ngawi 1 are triangular in horizontal cross sections, and are more similar to Ngandong in this respect. However, these processes are distinctly smaller and less inferiorly projecting than any of the Ngandong crania, although they are larger than the processes from the Bapang- AG levels of Sangiran. [41, 42] As in Ngandong, Ngawi 1 shows well-developed postcondyloid tuberosity and opisthionic recess in the posterior foramen magnum region. [43] The digastric fossa of Ngawi 1 is as narrow as those seen in the Ngandong series, and is different from wider fossae from Sangiran. Medial to this fossa, the development of juxtamastoid crest is moderate (left) to weak (right). Other notable features Antón (2003) noted that the relative mediolateral width of the mandibular fossa (fossa width/maximum cranial length: her fig. 4) of Ngawi 1 is far greater than in the other Indonesian H. erectus specimens. Our preliminary metric data taken from casts does not support this claim. The mandibular fossa width given in Table 1 for Ngawi 1 (~29 mm, 15.5% relative to its maximum cranial length) is well within the range of variation exhibited by the following measurable Javanese specimens both absolutely and relatively: S 2 (25 mm, 13.7%), S 17 (32 mm, 15.5%), S IX (~30 mm, 15.5%), Ng 6 (36 mm, 16.3%), and Ng 12 (~30 mm, 14.9%). Foramen ovale is unique in Ng 7, Ng 12, and Sm 4 (Weidenreich, 1951; Baba et al., 2003). They are large, rounded, and are often associated with a bony bridge that subdivides inside of the foramen (left sides of Ng 7 and Sm 4, and both sides of Ng 12). Weidenreich (1951) and Durband (2007) reported that such bridging is not present in modern humans and other H. erectus skulls including S 4 from Sangiran. The original specimen and the CT scan indicate that, on both sides, the foramen ovale of Ngawi 1 is a moderate-sized, single, broad ellipse with no development of a bony bridge. Other anomalies such as jugular foramen bridging, hypoglossal canal bridging, transverse basilar cleft, and carticoclinoid foramen (Kawakubo et al., 2013, 2014) are also not evident on the exto- and endocranial surfaces. The cleaned basicranial surface of Ngawi 1 now exposes other characteristic features of H. erectus. These include a restricted foramen lacerum, angled tympanic petrous bone arrangement, and medial recess of the mandibular fossa. Principal component analysis The first two and next two PCs produced by the PCA using 19 size-adjusted measurements explain 56% and 20% of the total variation, respectively. Figure 9 shows plots of these PC scores. If we focus on those variables with component loadings of more than 0.5, PC1 positively loads crania with, in relative terms, a narrower frontal squama (POBB), a wider mid- and posterior vault (XBPB, SMCB, ASB), a lower vault (PBRH), a shorter occipital upper scale (LOPC, OPOC), a less lateral thinning of the supraorbital torus (SOTT3, SOTT5), a posteriorly extensive temporal muscle (TMAL), and a shorter parietomastoid suture (PMSL). This PC effectively separates the Sangiran and Ngandong specimens. The Sambungmacan and Ngawi crania are situated in between the two groups but closer to Ngandong in this PC. PC2 positively loads crania with a longer vault (GOL, GLBC) and a narrower midvault (SQSB, XBPB, SMCB, BRAB). The Sangiran, Sambungmacan, Ngawi, and Ngandong subsamples show extensive overlap to each other in this PC, but Ng 6 and Sm 3 somewhat stand out with their relatively longer (Ng 6) or shorter (Sm 3) vaults. PC3 and PC4 do not effectively distinguish Sangiran and Ngandong. The Sambungmacan and Ngawi specimens are largely within the great variation exhibited by the Sangiran crania in these PCs. Figure 9. Plots of PC scores. Symbols as in Figure 6.

13 Vol. 123, 2015 HOMO ERECTUS FROM NGAWI, JAVA 173 Table 3. Tests for allometric scaling relationships Variables Refer to a Expectation b r c P ln(pobb/xbpb) [3], Figure 7a positive ln(sqsb/brab) [4], Figure 7b positive ln(pbrh/gol) [7], Figure 7c positive ln(pbrh/xbpb) [7], Figure 7d positive ln(sott5/sott3) [13], Figure 7e positive ln(etbl/gol) [21], Figure 7f positive ln(pmsl/etbl) [22, 23], Figure 7g positive ln(smcd/gol) [25] positive ln(lopc/opoc) [26], Figure 7h positive ln(wfrb) [32], Figure 7i positive ln(bstb) [32], Figure 7i positive ln(tmal/gol) [33], Figure 7j negative ln(lbtm/gol) [37], Figure 7k positive PC1 Figure 9 negative a Character numbers from Table 2 (in brackets) and relevant figure. b Expected direction of correlation when a trait covaries with cranial size and that relationship explains the observed temporal variation in Javanese H. erectus. c Pearson correlation coefficient. Bold font means that the expected and observed directions correspond to each other. Allometry Table 3 shows Pearson s correlation coefficients between the log-transformed neurocranial size variable and other morphological parameters in the Ngandong sample (n = 5). The column expectation is the expected direction of correlation if a trait covaries with cranial size and that relationship explains the observed temporal variation in Javanese H. erectus. The observed within-group correlations follow such expected directions only in four cases (indicated in bold in Table 3) but none of them are statistically significant. Thus, the present analyses based on a very small sample show no support for allometric trends that explain the temporal morphological variations in Javanese H. erectus crania. Each of the metric characters examined in Table 3 has changed through time probably independently from the cranial size increase. Discussion Based on the cleaned original specimen and micro-ct scan, we have updated some previous assessments of Ngawi 1 (ECV, nature of the distortion, mandibular fossa morphology, etc.) and offer here character-by-character comparisons that are useful to evaluate its morphological status within the whole H. erectus assemblage from Java. Because some of the 33 and a few more characters investigated above are probably correlated to each other as discussed by Kaifu et al. (2008), simple counts of similar or different characters in Table 2 do not directly reflect the strength of taxonomic affinities for the cranial specimens analyzed here. Keeping this point in mind, we will discuss the evolutionary significance of Ngawi 1 as well as the three Sambungmacan crania in the following sections. Overall, the results summarized in Table 2 and Figure 9 support the previous evaluation that Ngawi 1 is generally similar to the Ngandong crania rather than to the Early Pleistocene specimens from Sangiran and Trinil. However, in the following aspects, Ngawi 1 is outside the variation of the Ngandong sample, and is encompassed within the variation of the terminal Early Pleistocene Bapang-AG sample or exhibits intermediate morphology between the two samples. These are: the comparatively smaller neurocranial size [1] (the square brackets hereinafter mean the character number in Table 2), the weak but distinct supraglabellar depression [12], the relatively short temporal bone [21], limited posterior projection of the middle part of the occipital torus [29], the shallower and roofed mandibular fossa [38], and the smaller mastoid process [40]. Additionally, although the overall cranial shape of Ngawi is similar to Ngandong (Durband, 2006; Baab, 2010; Zeitoun et al., 2010), in most or all of the bivariate plots in Figure 7, Ngawi occupies, within the clouds formed by the Ngandong specimens, poles that are closer to the Sangiran sample. Interestingly, in none of the 33 cranial characters investigated above, Ngawi 1 exhibit conditions that are more advanced or specialized compared to the Ngandong sample. Our PCA using 19 linear measurements (Figure 9) also agrees with this evaluation. Examination of allometric trends in fossil hominins is a difficult task due to the small available samples. However, our preliminary examination focusing on the within-group variation in a small Ngandong population sample (Table 3) does not offer evidence that these morphological differences between the earlier and later Javanese H. erectus are the results of cranial size increase. Each of the three crania from Sambungmacan also shows general similarities to the Ngandong cranial morphology but closer to earlier Javanese H. erectus in a few or more characters ([12], [13], [22 and 23], [33], and [38] for Sm 1; [1], [29] for Sm 3; [7], [13], [36], [38], [40], and [43] for Sm 4: Table 2). Our PCA (Figure 9) supports these assessments. A few exceptions to these directional shifts are the wider frontal squama in Sm 4 [3], relatively longer parietomastoid suture in Sm 3 [23], and the more globular sagittal cranial outline in Sm 3 (Delson et al., 2001; related to Figure 7c [7]

The Sambungmacan 3Homo erectus Calvaria: AComparative Morphometric and Morphological Analysis

The Sambungmacan 3Homo erectus Calvaria: AComparative Morphometric and Morphological Analysis THE ANATOMICAL RECORD 262:380 397 (2001) The Sambungmacan 3Homo erectus Calvaria: AComparative Morphometric and Morphological Analysis ERIC DELSON, 1 4 *KATERINA HARVATI, 1 4 DAVID REDDY, 4,5 LESLIE F.

More information

Global and local perspectives on cranial shape variation in Indonesian Homo erectus

Global and local perspectives on cranial shape variation in Indonesian Homo erectus Anthropological Science Vol. 125(2), 67 83, 2017 Global and local perspectives on cranial shape variation in Indonesian Homo erectus Karen L. Baab 1 *, Yahdi Zaim 2 1 Department of Anatomy, Midwestern

More information

Preliminary Observation of a New Cranium of ônh ôhomo erectus ôns ô. (Tjg ) from Sangiran, Central Jawa

Preliminary Observation of a New Cranium of ônh ôhomo erectus ôns ô. (Tjg ) from Sangiran, Central Jawa Anthropological Science 110(2), 165-177, 2002 Preliminary Observation of a New Cranium of ônh ôhomo erectus ôns ô (Tjg-1993.05) from Sangiran, Central Jawa Johan Arif1, Yousuke Kaifu2, Hisao Baba2, Made

More information

The Lake Ndutu Cranium and Early Homo Sapiens in Africa

The Lake Ndutu Cranium and Early Homo Sapiens in Africa AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 61245-254 (1983) The Lake Ndutu Cranium and Early Homo Sapiens in Africa G. PHILIP RIGHTMIRE Department of Anthropology, State University of New York, Binghamton,

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION doi: 10.1038/nature05986 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Implications of new early Homo fossils from Ileret, east of Lake Turkana, Kenya. F. Spoor, M. G. Leakey, P.N. Gathogo, F.H. Brown, S.C. Antón, I. McDougall,

More information

Xinzhi Wu 1 and Sheela Athreya 2 * Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing , China. Homo heidelbergensis; Homo erectus; Asia

Xinzhi Wu 1 and Sheela Athreya 2 * Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing , China. Homo heidelbergensis; Homo erectus; Asia AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 150:141 157 (2013) A Description of the Geological Context, Discrete Traits, and Linear Morphometrics of the Middle Pleistocene Hominin from Dali, Shaanxi Province,

More information

Lab #9. Trends in the evolution of Homo, early "modern" H. sapiens

Lab #9. Trends in the evolution of Homo, early modern H. sapiens Lab #9. Trends in the evolution of Homo, early "modern" H. sapiens NOTE: There are 3 goals to this lab. First, you have an opportunity to review various fossil Homo specimens and take notes on their morphology.

More information

The evolution of cranial form in mid-pleistocene Homo

The evolution of cranial form in mid-pleistocene Homo Page 1 of 10 The evolution of cranial form in mid-pleistocene Homo Author: G. Philip Rightmire 1 Affiliation: 1 Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, USA Correspondence

More information

The human cranium from Bodo, Ethiopia: evidence for speciation in the Middle Pleistocene? G. Philip Rightmire

The human cranium from Bodo, Ethiopia: evidence for speciation in the Middle Pleistocene? G. Philip Rightmire G. Philip Rightmire Department of Anthropology, State University of New York, Binghamton, New York 13902-6000, U.S.A. Received 19 June 1995 Revision received 13 December 1995 and accepted 30 December 1995

More information

ARTICLE IN PRESS. Journal of Human Evolution

ARTICLE IN PRESS. Journal of Human Evolution Journal of Human Evolution xxx (2008) 1 15 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Journal of Human Evolution journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jhevol Size, shape, and asymmetry in fossil hominins:

More information

The Sima de los Huesos crania (Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain). A comparative study

The Sima de los Huesos crania (Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain). A comparative study J. L. Arsuaga, I. Martínez, A. Gracia & C. Lorenzo Departamento de Paleontología, U.A. de Paleoantropología UCM-CSIC, Instituto de Geología Económica UCM-CSIC; Facultad de Ciencias Geológicas, Universidad

More information

Diversity and Human Evolution. Homo neanderthalensis. Homo neanderthalensis. Homo neanderthalensis. Homo neanderthalensis. Part II

Diversity and Human Evolution. Homo neanderthalensis. Homo neanderthalensis. Homo neanderthalensis. Homo neanderthalensis. Part II Diversity and Human Evolution Part II Neanderthal 1 La Chapelle-aux-Saints Photograph byrheinisches LandesmuseumBonn Photographs by John Reader Mount Circeo Photograph by Ministry of Culture, Italy An

More information

17 3-D geometric morphometric analysis of temporal bone landmarks in Neanderthals and modern humans

17 3-D geometric morphometric analysis of temporal bone landmarks in Neanderthals and modern humans 17 3-D geometric morphometric analysis of temporal bone landmarks in Neanderthals and modern humans Katerina Harvati Department of Anthropology, New York University, 25 Waverly Place, New York NY 10003,

More information

Quantitative Analysis of Neanderthal Temporal Bone Morphology Using Three-Dimensional Geometric Morphometrics

Quantitative Analysis of Neanderthal Temporal Bone Morphology Using Three-Dimensional Geometric Morphometrics AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 120:323 338 (2003) Quantitative Analysis of Neanderthal Temporal Bone Morphology Using Three-Dimensional Geometric Morphometrics Katerina Harvati* Department of

More information

Laetoli Hominid 18: an Early Homo sapiens Skull

Laetoli Hominid 18: an Early Homo sapiens Skull C. C. Magori Department of Anatom~ P.O. Box Box 65001, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania M. H. Day Department of Anatomy, St 77zomas's Hospital Medical School, Lambeth Palace Road, London SEl 7EH, U.K. Keywords:

More information

Quantifying temporal bone morphology of great apes. and humans: an approach using geometric morphometrics

Quantifying temporal bone morphology of great apes. and humans: an approach using geometric morphometrics J. Anat. (2002) 201, pp447 464 Quantifying temporal bone morphology of great apes Blackwell Science, Ltd and humans: an approach using geometric morphometrics Charles A. Lockwood, 1 John M. Lynch 2 and

More information

The Neanderthal chignon : Variation, integration, and homology

The Neanderthal chignon : Variation, integration, and homology Journal of Human Evolution 5 (007) 6e7 The Neanderthal chignon : Variation, integration, and homology Philipp Gunz, Katerina Harvati* Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary

More information

TITLE: A paleoneurological survey of Homo erectus endocranial metrics

TITLE: A paleoneurological survey of Homo erectus endocranial metrics 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 TITLE: A paleoneurological survey of Homo erectus endocranial metrics AUTHORS: Emiliano Bruner 1, Dominique

More information

CRANIAL SIZE VARIATION AND LINEAGE DIVERSITY IN EARLY PLEISTOCENE HOMO

CRANIAL SIZE VARIATION AND LINEAGE DIVERSITY IN EARLY PLEISTOCENE HOMO doi:10.1111/evo.12215 CRANIAL SIZE VARIATION AND LINEAGE DIVERSITY IN EARLY PLEISTOCENE HOMO Jeremiah E. Scott 1,2 1 Department of Anthropology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois, 62901

More information

I Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg. 17 I: Figs.: Frankfurt am Main,

I Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg. 17 I: Figs.: Frankfurt am Main, I Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg. 17 I: 47-59. 13 Figs.: Frankfurt am Main, 1.05.1994 A Tentative Reconstruction of the Cranial Human. Remains of Hanoman I From Bukuran, Sangiran (Central Java)

More information

Cranial Size Variation and Lineage Diversity in Early Pleistocene Homo

Cranial Size Variation and Lineage Diversity in Early Pleistocene Homo Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC Publications Department of Anthropology -0 Cranial Size Variation and Lineage Diversity in Early Pleistocene Homo Jeremiah E. Scott Southern Illinois University

More information

Discriminative Direction for Kernel Classifiers

Discriminative Direction for Kernel Classifiers Discriminative Direction for Kernel Classifiers Polina Golland Artificial Intelligence Lab Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA 02139 polina@ai.mit.edu Abstract In many scientific and engineering

More information

The frontal bone in the genus Homo: a survey of functional and phylogenetic sources of variation

The frontal bone in the genus Homo: a survey of functional and phylogenetic sources of variation doi 10.4436/jass.90008 e-pub ahead of print JASs Invited Reviews Journal of Anthropological Sciences Vol. 90 (2012), pp. 1-22 The frontal bone in the genus Homo: a survey of functional and phylogenetic

More information

Electronic Supplementary Material. Brain size of Homo floresiensis and its evolutionary implications

Electronic Supplementary Material. Brain size of Homo floresiensis and its evolutionary implications 1 Electronic Supplementary Material Brain size of Homo floresiensis and its evolutionary implications Daisuke Kubo a, Reiko T. Kono b, Yousuke Kaifu a,b * a Department of Biological Sciences, The University

More information

The Internal Cranial Anatomy of the Middle Pleistocene Broken Hill 1 Cranium

The Internal Cranial Anatomy of the Middle Pleistocene Broken Hill 1 Cranium The Internal Cranial Anatomy of the Middle Pleistocene Broken Hill 1 Cranium ANTOINE BALZEAU Équipe de Paléontologie Humaine, UMR 7194 du CNRS, Département Homme et Environnement, Muséum national d Histoire

More information

Basicranial influence on overall cranial shape

Basicranial influence on overall cranial shape Daniel E. Lieberman Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, 2110 G St, NW, Washington, DC 20052, U.S.A. E-mail: danlieb@gwu.edu and Human Origins Program, National Museum of National

More information

11. Variation in the Early and Middle Pleistocene: The phylogenetic relationships of Ceprano, Bodo, Daka, Kabwe and Buia

11. Variation in the Early and Middle Pleistocene: The phylogenetic relationships of Ceprano, Bodo, Daka, Kabwe and Buia 11. Variation in the Early and Middle Pleistocene: The phylogenetic relationships of Ceprano, Bodo, Daka, Kabwe and Buia Debbie Argue Introduction Despite the increased number of hominin fossils available

More information

H. erectus. Middle Pleistocene Archaic H. sapiens kya. H. sapiens, present

H. erectus. Middle Pleistocene Archaic H. sapiens kya. H. sapiens, present H. erectus Middle Pleistocene Archaic H. sapiens 780-125 kya H. sapiens, present 1 1 2 3 3 2 4 4 Atapuerca 5 Archaic H. sapiens 5 5 Modern Homo sapiens Middle Pleistocene and living humans compared Archaic

More information

Biological Anthropology

Biological Anthropology Biological Anthropology Sample Exam 3 Fall 2017 This sample exam, which contains questions from exams given sometime in the past, will provide you with an idea of the types of questions you will face on

More information

An Analysis of the Identity and Relationship Among Skeletal Remains of the Upper Paleolithic Era

An Analysis of the Identity and Relationship Among Skeletal Remains of the Upper Paleolithic Era ESSAI Volume 3 Article 17 Spring 2005 An Analysis of the Identity and Relationship Among Skeletal Remains of the Upper Paleolithic Era Brian Kinsman College of DuPage Follow this and additional works at:

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Pleiotropic Scaling of Gene Effects and the Cost of Complexity by Günter P. Wagner et al. Figure S1: Figure S1: schematic summary of findings. (a) Most QTL affect a relatively small number of traits (

More information

JOEL CRACRAFT. N 1913 Shufeldt described a new fossil bird, Palaeophasianus meleagroides,

JOEL CRACRAFT. N 1913 Shufeldt described a new fossil bird, Palaeophasianus meleagroides, REALLOCATION PALAEOPHASIANUS OF THE EOCENE MELEAGROIDES FOSSIL SHUFELDTl I JOEL CRACRAFT N 1913 Shufeldt described a new fossil bird, Palaeophasianus meleagroides, from the early Eocene of Wyoming. Shufeldt

More information

Journal of Human Evolution

Journal of Human Evolution Journal of Human Evolution 59 (2010) 445e464 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Journal of Human Evolution journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jhevol Evolution of middle-late Pleistocene human

More information

THE LANSING SKELETON

THE LANSING SKELETON THE LANSING SKELETON BY ALES HRDLICKA The skeleton of the so-called " Lansing man," the history of which has become well known through the writings of Williston,' Upham,z Winchell: Chamberlin; and Holmes;

More information

Southeast Asian and Australian paleoanthropology: A review of the last century

Southeast Asian and Australian paleoanthropology: A review of the last century JASs Invited Reviews Journal of Anthropological Sciences Vol. 87 (2009), pp. 1-xxx Southeast Asian and Australian paleoanthropology: A review of the last century Arthur C. Durband Department of Sociology,

More information

Research Article A 150- Year Conundrum: Cranial Robusticity and Its Bearing on the Origin of Aboriginal Australians

Research Article A 150- Year Conundrum: Cranial Robusticity and Its Bearing on the Origin of Aboriginal Australians SAGE-Hindawi Access to Research International Journal of Evolutionary Biology Volume 2011, Article ID 632484, 18 pages doi:10.4061/2011/632484 Research Article A 150- Year Conundrum: Cranial Robusticity

More information

Surprise! A New Hominin Fossil Changes Almost Nothing!

Surprise! A New Hominin Fossil Changes Almost Nothing! Surprise! A New Hominin Fossil Changes Almost Nothing! Author: Andrew J Petto Table 1: Brief Comparison of Australopithecus with early Homo fossils Species Apes (outgroup) Thanks to Louise S Mead for comments

More information

LIGHT. A beam is made up of several rays. It maybe parallel, diverging (spreading out) or converging (getting narrower). Parallel Diverging Converging

LIGHT. A beam is made up of several rays. It maybe parallel, diverging (spreading out) or converging (getting narrower). Parallel Diverging Converging LIGHT Light is a form of energy. It stimulates the retina of the eye and produces the sensation of sight. We see an object when light leaves it and enters the eye. Objects such as flames, the sum and stars

More information

Four kinds of hominins lived about 1.8 mya near Lake Turkana N. Kenya: Australopithecus boisei, H. rudolfensis, H. habilis and H. erectus foraged in

Four kinds of hominins lived about 1.8 mya near Lake Turkana N. Kenya: Australopithecus boisei, H. rudolfensis, H. habilis and H. erectus foraged in Four kinds of hominins lived about 1.8 mya near Lake Turkana N. Kenya: Australopithecus boisei, H. rudolfensis, H. habilis and H. erectus foraged in the same area. We don t know if they interacted. H.

More information

Hominid Cranial Remains From Upper Pleistocene Deposits at Aduma, Middle Awash, Ethiopia

Hominid Cranial Remains From Upper Pleistocene Deposits at Aduma, Middle Awash, Ethiopia AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 123:1 10 (2004) Hominid Cranial Remains From Upper Pleistocene Deposits at Aduma, Middle Awash, Ethiopia Y. Haile-Selassie, 1 * B. Asfaw, 2 and T.D. White 3 1

More information

depression above scarp scarp

depression above scarp scarp 1 LAB 1: FIELD TRIP TO McKINLEYVILLE AND MOUTH OF THE MAD RIVER OBJECTIVES: a. to look at geomorphic and geologic evidence for large scale thrust-faulting of young sediments in the Humboldt Bay region

More information

Hominin cranial base evolution and genes implicated in basioccipital. development:

Hominin cranial base evolution and genes implicated in basioccipital. development: Hominin cranial base evolution and genes implicated in basioccipital development: Role of Pax7, Fgfr3 and Disp1 in basioccipital development and integration By Lisa Nevell B.A. 1997, Beloit College M.A.

More information

Characteristics and variation of the temporal bone pneumatization in Asian Homo erectus

Characteristics and variation of the temporal bone pneumatization in Asian Homo erectus Characteristics and variation of the temporal bone pneumatization in Asian Homo erectus Antoine Balzeau, Dominique Grimaud-Hervé, François Sémah To cite this version: Antoine Balzeau, Dominique Grimaud-Hervé,

More information

Paleoanthropology. The dawn of Homo floresiensis

Paleoanthropology. The dawn of Homo floresiensis Paleoanthropology The dawn of Homo floresiensis New fossil findings from the Mata Menge site demonstrate that Homo floresiensis lived on the Indonesian island of Flores at least 700,000 years ago, and

More information

190,000 YBP and the Chaoxian site to between ,000 YBP. While uranium series dates. are still subject to considerable controversy, the

190,000 YBP and the Chaoxian site to between ,000 YBP. While uranium series dates. are still subject to considerable controversy, the Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers, Nos. 71-72, 1990 A Case Study of the "erectus" - "sapiens" Transition in Asia: Hominid Remains from Heian and Chaoian Counties, Anhui Province, China Dennis A. Etler

More information

The Biomechanics of Zygomatic Arch Shape

The Biomechanics of Zygomatic Arch Shape THE ANATOMICAL RECORD 299:1734 1752 (2016) The Biomechanics of Zygomatic Arch Shape AMANDA L. SMITH 1 * AND IAN R. GROSSE 2 1 Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, One Brookings

More information

Provenience Reassessment of the Ngandong Homo erectus (Java), Confirmation of the Bone-Bed Origin Reported by the Discoverers

Provenience Reassessment of the Ngandong Homo erectus (Java), Confirmation of the Bone-Bed Origin Reported by the Discoverers Provenience Reassessment of the 1931 1933 Ngandong Homo erectus (Java), Confirmation of the Bone-Bed Origin Reported by the Discoverers O. FRANK HUFFMAN Department of Anthropology, University of Texas

More information

Brief Communication: New Reconstruction of the Taung Endocast

Brief Communication: New Reconstruction of the Taung Endocast AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 134:529 534 (2007) Brief Communication: New Reconstruction of the Taung Endocast Dean Falk 1 * and Ron Clarke 2 1 Department of Anthropology, Florida State University,

More information

Using 3-D Geometric Morphometric Techniques to Further Understand the Relationship Between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens

Using 3-D Geometric Morphometric Techniques to Further Understand the Relationship Between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers Graduate School 2008 Using 3-D Geometric Morphometric Techniques to Further Understand the Relationship

More information

Ontogenetic Allometry, Heterochrony, and Interspecific Differences in the Skull of African Apes, Using Tridimensional Procrustes Analysis

Ontogenetic Allometry, Heterochrony, and Interspecific Differences in the Skull of African Apes, Using Tridimensional Procrustes Analysis AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 124:124 138 (2004) Ontogenetic Allometry, Heterochrony, and Interspecific Differences in the Skull of African Apes, Using Tridimensional Procrustes Analysis Christine

More information

Supplementary Material

Supplementary Material GSA Data Repository item 2018118 Brardinoni, F., Picotti, V., Maraio, S., Paolo Bruno, P., Cucato, M., Morelli, C., and Mair, V., 2018, Postglacial evolution of a formerly glaciated valley: Reconstructing

More information

Hominid Evolution What derived characteristics differentiate members of the Family Hominidae and how are they related?

Hominid Evolution What derived characteristics differentiate members of the Family Hominidae and how are they related? Hominid Evolution What derived characteristics differentiate members of the Family Hominidae and how are they related? Introduction. The central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares

More information

ANTHROPOLOGY 202 October 6, 2014 An Introduction to World Prehistory. VI. Out of Africa: Middle Homo

ANTHROPOLOGY 202 October 6, 2014 An Introduction to World Prehistory. VI. Out of Africa: Middle Homo ANTHROPOLOGY 202 October 6, 2014 An Introduction to World Prehistory VI. Out of Africa: Middle Homo ANT 202 Wednesday October 6, 2014 STUDENTS WITH LAST NAMES S-Z PLEASE STAY FOR A DEMONSTRATION AT THE

More information

Cranial integration in Homo: singular warps analysis of the midsagittal plane in ontogeny and evolution

Cranial integration in Homo: singular warps analysis of the midsagittal plane in ontogeny and evolution Journal of Human Evolution 44 (2003) 167 187 Cranial integration in Homo: singular warps analysis of the midsagittal plane in ontogeny and evolution Fred L. Bookstein a,b, Philipp Gunz a, Philipp Mitterœcker

More information

Discovery of Fossil Homo sapiens from Cho chen in Taiwan

Discovery of Fossil Homo sapiens from Cho chen in Taiwan Discovery of Fossil Homo sapiens from Cho chen in Taiwan Tokio SHIKAMA,1) C. C. LING,2) Nobuo SHIMODA,3) and Hisao BABA4) 1) Geological Institute, Yokohama National University 1) Department of Geology,

More information

New discoveries and interpretations of hominid fossils and artifacts from Vindija Cave, Croatia

New discoveries and interpretations of hominid fossils and artifacts from Vindija Cave, Croatia Journal of Human Evolution 46 (2004) 25 65 New discoveries and interpretations of hominid fossils and artifacts from Vindija Cave, Croatia James C.M. Ahern a *, Ivor Karavanić b, Maja Paunović c, Ivor

More information

Kjersti Aas Line Eikvil Otto Milvang. Norwegian Computing Center, P.O. Box 114 Blindern, N-0314 Oslo, Norway. sharp reexes was a challenge. machine.

Kjersti Aas Line Eikvil Otto Milvang. Norwegian Computing Center, P.O. Box 114 Blindern, N-0314 Oslo, Norway. sharp reexes was a challenge. machine. Automatic Can Separation Kjersti Aas Line Eikvil Otto Milvang Norwegian Computing Center, P.O. Box 114 Blindern, N-0314 Oslo, Norway e-mail: Kjersti.Aas@nr.no Tel: (+47) 22 85 25 00 Fax: (+47) 22 69 76

More information

THREE-DIMENSIONAL RE-EVALUATION OF THE DEFORMATION REMOVAL TECHNIQUE BASED ON JIGSAW PUZZLING. Alec A. Boyd and Ryosuke Motani

THREE-DIMENSIONAL RE-EVALUATION OF THE DEFORMATION REMOVAL TECHNIQUE BASED ON JIGSAW PUZZLING. Alec A. Boyd and Ryosuke Motani Palaeontologia Electronica http://palaeo-electronica.org THREE-DIMENSIONAL RE-EVALUATION OF THE DEFORMATION REMOVAL TECHNIQUE BASED ON JIGSAW PUZZLING Alec A. Boyd and Ryosuke Motani ABSTRACT Retrodeformation

More information

Energy Use in Homes. A series of reports on domestic energy use in England. Energy Efficiency

Energy Use in Homes. A series of reports on domestic energy use in England. Energy Efficiency Energy Use in Homes A series of reports on domestic energy use in England Energy Efficiency Energy Use in Homes A series of reports on domestic energy use in England This is one of a series of three reports

More information

Primary Structures in Sedimentary Rocks. Engr. Sultan A. Khoso

Primary Structures in Sedimentary Rocks. Engr. Sultan A. Khoso Primary Structures in Sedimentary Rocks Engr. Sultan A. Khoso Sedimentary rocks Sedimentary rocks are those rocks which are formed by the weathered sediments of pre existing rocks (igneous or metamorphic

More information

Computerized Paleoanthropology and Neanderthals: The Case of Le Moustier 1

Computerized Paleoanthropology and Neanderthals: The Case of Le Moustier 1 68 Hominid Evolution Computerized Paleoanthropology and Neanderthals: The Case of Le Moustier 1 MARCIA S. PONCE DE LEÓN Using the Le Moustier 1 specimen as a test case, this study establishes a framework

More information

The Degree of Standardisation in the An Sơn Ceramic Assemblage

The Degree of Standardisation in the An Sơn Ceramic Assemblage 7 The Degree of Standardisation in the An Sơn Ceramic Assemblage Introduction: Methodology for the study of standardisation The level of standardisation within an assemblage of pottery is used as an indirect

More information

of Central Asia as the eastern outpost of the Neandertal Range? A Reassessment of the Teshik-Tash Child

of Central Asia as the eastern outpost of the Neandertal Range? A Reassessment of the Teshik-Tash Child AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 138:45 61 (2009) Is Central Asia the Eastern Outpost of the Neandertal Range? A Reassessment of the Teshik-Tash Child Michelle Glantz, 1 * Sheela Athreya, 2 and

More information

The course of human evolution in the Middle

The course of human evolution in the Middle RESEARCH RESEARCH ARTICLE HUMAN EVOLUTION Neandertal roots: Cranial and chronological evidence from Sima de los Huesos J. L. Arsuaga, 1,2 * I. Martínez, 3,1 L. J. Arnold, 4,5 A. Aranburu, 6 A. Gracia-Téllez,

More information

Seismic stratigraphy, some examples from Indian Ocean, interpretation of reflection data in interactive mode

Seismic stratigraphy, some examples from Indian Ocean, interpretation of reflection data in interactive mode Seismic stratigraphy, some examples from Indian Ocean, interpretation of reflection data in interactive mode K. S. Krishna National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa-403 004. krishna@nio.org Seismic

More information

Unit 1: Body Plan & Organization Test Review 1. Define anatomy and contrast it with physiology.

Unit 1: Body Plan & Organization Test Review 1. Define anatomy and contrast it with physiology. Name: Period: Unit 1: Body Plan & Organization Test Review 1. Define anatomy and contrast it with physiology. 2. Arrange and identify, in order, the six levels of structural organization of the human body.

More information

The Discovery and Classification of Remains of Hominid Found in a Cave in Present-Day Morocco

The Discovery and Classification of Remains of Hominid Found in a Cave in Present-Day Morocco ESSAI Volume 4 Article 28 Spring 2006 The Discovery and Classification of Remains of Hominid Found in a Cave in Present-Day Morocco Hannah Kim College of DuPage Follow this and additional works at: http://dc.cod.edu/essai

More information

The bony labyrinth of Neanderthals

The bony labyrinth of Neanderthals Journal of Human Evolution 44 (2003) 141 165 The bony labyrinth of Neanderthals Fred Spoor a*, Jean-Jacques Hublin b, Marc Braun c, Frans Zonneveld d a Evolutionary Anatomy Unit, Dept. of Anatomy and Developmental

More information

Craniodental Variation in Paranthropus boisei: A Developmental and Functional Perspective

Craniodental Variation in Paranthropus boisei: A Developmental and Functional Perspective AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 116:13 25 (2001) Craniodental Variation in Paranthropus boisei: A Developmental and Functional Perspective Bernard Wood 1 * and Daniel E. Lieberman 2 1 Department

More information

stone age institute publication series

stone age institute publication series stone age institute publication series Series Editors Kathy Schick and Nicholas Toth Stone Age Institute Gosport, Indiana and Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana Number 1. THE OLDOWAN: Case Studies

More information

Announcements. Today. Chapter 8 primate and hominin origins. Keep in mind. Quiz 2: Wednesday/Thursday May 15/16 (week 14)

Announcements. Today. Chapter 8 primate and hominin origins. Keep in mind. Quiz 2: Wednesday/Thursday May 15/16 (week 14) Announcements Today Chapter 8 primate and hominin origins Keep in mind Quiz 2: Wednesday/Thursday May 15/16 (week 14) Essay 2: Questions are up on course website 1 Recap the main points of ch 6 and 7 Evolutionary

More information

Chapter 1. The Human Organism 1-1

Chapter 1. The Human Organism 1-1 Chapter 1 The Human Organism 1-1 Overview of Anatomy and Physiology Anatomy: Scientific discipline that investigates the body s structure Physiology: Scientific investigation of the processes or functions

More information

Early primates and hominins

Early primates and hominins Early primates and hominins 1 Wild Card slide part deux 2 Hominins ~7-6 mya split from chimpanzees and bonobos -emerged and stayed in Africa until later Homo Mosaic evolution - these characteristics evolved

More information

Morphological affinities of the S{al a 1 frontal bone

Morphological affinities of the S{al a 1 frontal bone Vladimír Sládek Uu stav biologie obratlovců, Akademie věd C{R, Květná 8, 603 65, Brno, Czech Republic and Katedra sociální a kulturní antropologie, Fakulta humanitních studií, Západočeská univerzita, Tylova

More information

Excavations at Dmanisi, Georgia, have

Excavations at Dmanisi, Georgia, have 326 A Complete Skull from Dmanisi, Georgia, and the Evolutionary Biology of Early Homo David Lordkipanidze, 1 * Marcia S. Ponce de León, 2 Ann Margvelashvili, 1,2 Yoel Rak, 3 G. Philip Rightmire, 4 Abesalom

More information

Lecture 6 Folds, Faults and Deformation Dr. Shwan Omar

Lecture 6 Folds, Faults and Deformation Dr. Shwan Omar Fold: A fold is a bend or wrinkle of rock layers or foliation; folds form as a sequence of ductile deformation. Folding is the processes by which crustal forces deform an area of crust so that layers of

More information

Shape Earth. Plate Boundaries. Building. Building

Shape Earth. Plate Boundaries. Building. Building Chapter Introduction Lesson 1 Lesson 2 Lesson 3 Lesson 4 Chapter Wrap-Up Forces That Shape Earth Landforms at Plate Boundaries Mountain Building Continent Building How is Earth s surface shaped by plate

More information

Variation of geospatial thinking in answering geography questions based on topographic maps

Variation of geospatial thinking in answering geography questions based on topographic maps Variation of geospatial thinking in answering geography questions based on topographic maps Yoshiki Wakabayashi*, Yuri Matsui** * Tokyo Metropolitan University ** Itabashi-ku, Tokyo Abstract. This study

More information

Evaluation of a New Method of Fossil Retrodeformation by Symmetrization: Crania of Papionins (Primates, Cercopithecidae) As a Test Case

Evaluation of a New Method of Fossil Retrodeformation by Symmetrization: Crania of Papionins (Primates, Cercopithecidae) As a Test Case Grand Valley State University ScholarWorks@GVSU Funded Articles Open Access Publishing Support Fund 9-26-2014 Evaluation of a New Method of Fossil Retrodeformation by Symmetrization: Crania of Papionins

More information

The study of morphological variation in the hominid fossil record: biology, landmarks and geometry

The study of morphological variation in the hominid fossil record: biology, landmarks and geometry J. Anat. (2000) 197, pp. 103 120, with 6 figures Printed in the United Kingdom 103 Review The study of morphological variation in the hominid fossil record: biology, landmarks and geometry PAUL O HIGGINS

More information

PRACTICE TEST ANSWER KEY & SCORING GUIDELINES INTEGRATED MATHEMATICS I

PRACTICE TEST ANSWER KEY & SCORING GUIDELINES INTEGRATED MATHEMATICS I Ohio s State Tests PRACTICE TEST ANSWER KEY & SCORING GUIDELINES INTEGRATED MATHEMATICS I Table of Contents Questions 1 29: Content Summary and Answer Key... iii Question 1: Question and Scoring Guidelines...

More information

Phylogenetics - IB 200A Morphometrics

Phylogenetics - IB 200A Morphometrics Phylogenetics - IB 200A 2012 Morphometrics Morphometrics is the branch of mathematics studying the metrical and statistical properties of shapes and shape changes of geometric objects like molecules, fossils,

More information

Evaluating the Finds of a Recent Discovery of Humanoid Bones Suggesting the Coexistence of and Mating Between Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis

Evaluating the Finds of a Recent Discovery of Humanoid Bones Suggesting the Coexistence of and Mating Between Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis ESSAI Volume 3 Article 15 Spring 2005 Evaluating the Finds of a Recent Discovery of Humanoid Bones Suggesting the Coexistence of and Mating Between Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis Sara Heppner College

More information

Area-wide geotechnical information summary for CERA zoning review panel

Area-wide geotechnical information summary for CERA zoning review panel Area-wide geotechnical information summary for CERA zoning review panel This document contains all the area-wide geotechnical information which was considered by CERA as part of the process for making

More information

Postnatal ontogenetic size and shape changes in the craniums of plateau pika and woolly hare (Mammalia: Lagomorpha)

Postnatal ontogenetic size and shape changes in the craniums of plateau pika and woolly hare (Mammalia: Lagomorpha) Zoological Research 35 (4): 287 293 DOI:10.13918/j.issn.2095-8137.2014.4.287 Postnatal ontogenetic size and shape changes in the s of plateau pika and woolly hare (Mammalia: Lagomorpha) Zhi-Gui ZHANG 1,

More information

A Geometric Morphometric Analysis of Heterochrony in the Cranium of Chimpanzees and Bonobos

A Geometric Morphometric Analysis of Heterochrony in the Cranium of Chimpanzees and Bonobos Geometric Morphometric nalysis of Heterochrony in the Cranium of Chimpanzees and Bonobos The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story

More information

THE HETEROGENEOUS STRUCTURE OF FAULT ZONES WITHIN CARBONATE ROCKS: EVIDENCE FROM OUTCROP STUDIES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR FLUID FLOW

THE HETEROGENEOUS STRUCTURE OF FAULT ZONES WITHIN CARBONATE ROCKS: EVIDENCE FROM OUTCROP STUDIES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR FLUID FLOW THE HETEROGENEOUS STRUCTURE OF FAULT ZONES WITHIN CARBONATE ROCKS: EVIDENCE FROM OUTCROP STUDIES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR FLUID FLOW C.G. Bonson*, J.J. Walsh, C. Childs, M.P.J. Schöpfer & V. Carboni Fault

More information

Objectives: Define Relative Age, Absolute Age

Objectives: Define Relative Age, Absolute Age S6E5. Students will investigate the scientific view of how the earth s surface is formed. c. Classify rocks by their process of formation. g. Describe how fossils show evidence of the changing surface

More information

The Drimolen skull: the most complete australopithecine cranium and mandible to date

The Drimolen skull: the most complete australopithecine cranium and mandible to date Research Letters South African Journal of Science 96, April 2000 189 The Drimolen skull: the most complete australopithecine cranium and mandible to date André W. Keyser I report on a well-preserved Paranthropus

More information

We Prediction of Geological Characteristic Using Gaussian Mixture Model

We Prediction of Geological Characteristic Using Gaussian Mixture Model We-07-06 Prediction of Geological Characteristic Using Gaussian Mixture Model L. Li* (BGP,CNPC), Z.H. Wan (BGP,CNPC), S.F. Zhan (BGP,CNPC), C.F. Tao (BGP,CNPC) & X.H. Ran (BGP,CNPC) SUMMARY The multi-attribute

More information

Class updates. Ch 10 Middle Pleistocene hominins and Neandertal

Class updates. Ch 10 Middle Pleistocene hominins and Neandertal Class updates Ch 10 Middle Pleistocene hominins and Neandertal 1 Class updates Quiz 2 - Next Wednesday, May 16 Need: Scantron 882-E (big one) and note paper for short answer questions Topics: End of chapter

More information

Bridget Algee-Hewitt

Bridget Algee-Hewitt Senior Research Scientist, Ctr for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (CCSRE) CONTACT INFORMATION Alternate Contact Email bridget.algee-hewitt@stanford.edu Bio BIO Bridget F.B. Algee-Hewitt is a

More information

The affinities of Homo antecessor a review of craniofacial features and their taxonomic validity

The affinities of Homo antecessor a review of craniofacial features and their taxonomic validity Anthropological Review Vol. 81(3), 225 251 (2018) Anthropological Review Available online at: https://content.sciendo.com/anre Journal homepage: www.ptantropologiczne.pl The affinities of Homo antecessor

More information

INTRODUCTION, BACKGROUND, AND METHODOLOGY

INTRODUCTION, BACKGROUND, AND METHODOLOGY PART I INTRODUCTION, BACKGROUND, AND METHODOLOGY Philip G. Chase AndréDebénath Harold L. Dibble Shannon P. McPherron 1 3 Introduction and Background INTRODUCTION This monograph reports on excavations

More information

Outlines: (June 11, 1996) Instructor:

Outlines: (June 11, 1996) Instructor: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (June 11, 1996) Instructor: Tai-huang Huang Institute of Biomedical Sciences Academia Sinica Tel. (02) 2652-3036; Fax. (02) 2788-7641 E. mail: bmthh@ibms.sinica.edu.tw Reference:

More information

Chapter 1- An Orientation to the Human Body NOTES

Chapter 1- An Orientation to the Human Body NOTES Chapter 1- An Orientation to the Human Body NOTES Overview of Anatomy and Physiology: -Anatomy- of body parts and their relationships to one another. -Gross or Macroscopic= large and easily observable

More information

MORPHOMETRY OF THE ORBITAL REGION: BEAUTY IS BOUGHT BY JUDGMENT OF THE EYES. Anil Kumar * 1, Mahindra Nagar 2. *1

MORPHOMETRY OF THE ORBITAL REGION: BEAUTY IS BOUGHT BY JUDGMENT OF THE EYES. Anil Kumar * 1, Mahindra Nagar 2. *1 Original Article MORPHOMETRY OF THE ORBITAL REGION: BEAUTY IS BOUGHT BY JUDGMENT OF THE EYES. Anil Kumar * 1, Mahindra Nagar 2. *1 Department of Human Structure and Neurobiology, Oman medical college affiliated

More information

31/10/2012. Human Evolution. Cytochrome c DNA tree

31/10/2012. Human Evolution. Cytochrome c DNA tree Human Evolution Cytochrome c DNA tree 1 Human Evolution! Primate phylogeny! Primates branched off other mammalian lineages ~65 mya (mya = million years ago) Two types of monkeys within lineage 1. New World

More information

Mathematics (Project Maths)

Mathematics (Project Maths) Pre-Leaving Certificate Examination Mathematics (Project Maths) Paper Ordinary Level (with solutions) February 00 ½ hours 00 marks Running total Examination number Centre stamp For examiner Question Mark

More information

MAPPING FRACTURE APERTURES USING MICRO COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY

MAPPING FRACTURE APERTURES USING MICRO COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY MAPPING FRACTURE APERTURES USING MICRO COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY Z. Karpyn, A. Alajmi, C. Parada, A. S. Grader, P.M. Halleck, and O. Karacan. The Pennsylvania State University ABSTRACT Multi-phase flow in fractures

More information