Liujiang man explained

Common Name:Liujiang man
Species:Homo sapiens
Age:~33,000 to 23,000 BP
Epochs:Middle Paleolithic
Place Discovered:Tongtianyan Cave, China
Date Discovered:1958

The Liujiang man is among the earliest modern humans (Homo sapiens) found in East Asia.The remains were discovered in the Tongtianyan Cave (通天岩) in Liujiang, Guangxi, China.[1]

The remains were excavated in 1958 and consist of a well-preserved adult cranium, a right innominate (hip bone), complete sacrum, multiple vertebrae, and two femoral fragments. All remains are believed to have belonged to one individual.[2]

Very little is known about the specimen due to a lack of academic sources published within the United States. There seems to be a discrepancy in determining accurate dates of the specimen due to the unknown stratigraphic context in which the remains were found.[3]

The Liujiang sample was found to have craniometric and morphological similarities to modern day East Asian and Southeast Asian peoples (historically known as "Mongoloid" characteristics), which is quite surprising and suggesting that these features are thus quite old, dating back to early humans, while some argue that this may support an independent origin for East/Southeast Asians within East Asia (multiregional model).[4] [5] [6] [7]

The remains were originally dated to the Late Pleistocene, to at least 68,000 years ago, but more likely, to approximately 111-139 bp. High rates of variability yielded by various dating techniques carried out by different researchers place the most widely accepted range of dates with 68,000 BP as a minimum, but did not rule out dates as old as 159,000 BP.[8] Any date prior to 50,000 years ago would have bee surprising, as it would seem to predate the "recent dispersal" scenario of coastal migration ("Out of Africa II"). The remains have been considered in the context of a possible early dispersal which left Africa before 100,000 years ago, but which was extinct (or "retracted back to Africa") before the arrival of the "recent dispersal" wave.[9] A 2024 study provided new age estimates for these remains, recovering them as ~33,000 to 23,000 years old, in line with the age of other modern human fossils in Asia.[10]

Morphology

Regional population variation in sexual dimorphism hypothesis

Most scholars have interpreted the cranium of the specimen as male, but have encountered difficulties reaching a consensus in the sex of the pelvis. Scholar Karen Rosenburg argues that this difficulty is indicative of regional variations in the degree of sexual dimorphism consistent with modern populations. The degree of morphology variation consistent with modern populations suggest that the fossils may not be as old as previously thought.

Cranium (1567 cc)

The cranium of the Liujiang specimen is one of the mostcomplete to be found in China. The cranium was found filled with a stonematrix. The matrix filling the brain was scanned using computed tomography (CT)and turned into a reconstructed 3D image of the brain. The shape of the brainshares many similarities with modern East Asians, including a rounded shape, widefrontal lobes, and enlarged brain height. One major difference between theLiujiang specimen and modern Chinese populations was the enlarged occipital lobesfound on the Liujiang specimen. The common features between the Liujiangspecimen and modern humans, along with the cranial capacity of the skull (1567cc), places the specimen within the range of modern humans.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Shen . G. . Wang . W. . Wang . Q. . Zhao . J. . Collerson . K. . Zhou . C. . Tobias . P. V. . U-Series dating of Liujiang hominid site in Guangxi, Southern China . 10.1006/jhev.2002.0601 . Journal of Human Evolution . 43 . 6 . 817–829 . 2002 . 12473485.
  2. A Late Pleistocene Human Skeleton from Liujiang, China Suggests Regional Population Variation in Sexual Dimorphism in the Human Pelvis. Rosenburg. Karen. 2002. Variability and Evolution.
  3. Fossil Record of Early Modern Humans in East Asia. Kaifu. Yousuke. 2012. Palaeoenvironmental Changes and Human Dispersals in North and East Asia During MIS3 and MIS2. 248. 2. 10.1016/j.quaint.2011.02.017. 2012QuInt.248....2K.
  4. Curnoe D, Xueping J, Herries AI, Kanning B, Taçon PS, Zhende B, Fink D, Yunsheng Z, Hellstrom J, Yun L, Cassis G, Bing S, Wroe S, Shi H, Parr WC, Shengmin H, Rogers N . 6 . Human remains from the Pleistocene-Holocene transition of southwest China suggest a complex evolutionary history for East Asians . PLOS ONE . 7 . 3 . e31918 . 2012-03-14 . 22431968 . 3303470 . 10.1371/journal.pone.0031918 . 2012PLoSO...731918C . free .
  5. Cihai („Meer der Wörter“), Shanghai cishu chubanshe, Shanghai 2002,, S. 1061
  6. Karen Rosenburg: A Late Pleistocene Human Skeleton from Liujiang, China Suggests Regional Population Variation in Sexual Dimorphism in the Human Pelvis. In: Variability and Evolution.
  7. Peter Brown: The first modern East Asians? Another look at Upper Cave 101, Liujiang and Minatogawa 1. In: Keiichi Omoto (Hrsg.): Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese. International Research Center for Japanese Studies
  8. Web site: U-Series Dating of Liujian Hominid Site in Guangxi, Southern China | Request PDF .
  9. Liu . Hua . Prugnolle . Franck . Manica. Francois Balloux . Andrea . Balloux . François . August 2006 . A geographically explicit genetic model of worldwide human-settlement history . . 79 . 2 . 230–7 . 16826514 . 1559480 . 10.1086/505436 . CITEREFLiu, Prugnolle et al.2006.
  10. Ge . Junyi . Xing . Song . Grün . Rainer . Deng . Chenglong . Jiang . Yuanjin . Jiang . Tingyun . Yang . Shixia . Zhao . Keliang . Gao . Xing . Yang . Huili . Guo . Zhengtang . Petraglia . Michael D. . Shao . Qingfeng . 2024 . New Late Pleistocene age for the Homo sapiens skeleton from Liujiang southern China . Nature Communications . 15 . 1 . 3611 . 10.1038/s41467-024-47787-3 . free . 11058812 .
  11. The Brain Morphology of Homo Liujiang Cranium Fossil by Three-dimensional Computed Tomography. Wu. XiuJie. 2008. Chinese Science Bulletin. 53. 16. 2513. 10.1007/s11434-008-0263-z. 2008SciBu..53.2513W. 95685694.