A test of the multiregional hypothesis of modern human origins using basicranial evidence from Indonesia and Australia
Abstract (Summary)
Proponents of the Multiregional Hypothesis of modern human origins have consistently
stated that the material from Australasia provides one of the most compelling examples
of regional continuity in the human fossil record. According to these workers, features
found in the earliest Homo erectus fossils from Java can be traced through more
advanced hominids from Ngandong and are found in both fossil and recent Australian
Aborigines.
For this study, non-metric observations will be used to determine the degree of
similarity between earlier Homo erectus from Sangiran, the Ngandong fossils (including
the Sambungmacan hominids), and fossil/modern Australian Aborigines in the cranial
base. This study will examine the hypothesis that a number of non-metric features will
show an overall similarity between these samples, and will reject this hypothesis if it can
be shown that significant dissimilarity exists between these groups.
The results of this project highlight a suite of features on the cranial base in the
Ngandong sample that appear to be unique to that group. These morphologies include a
dual foramen ovale, the location of the squamotympanic fissure, the small size and
parallel orientation of the occipital condyles, and the marked expression of the
postcondyloid tuberosities. The presence of these autapomorphic characters in the
Ngandong population, in conjunction with previous work on the Pleistocene
paleoecology of Java, suggests that multiple hominid species inhabited that island during
the Pleistocene. This work also provides strong evidence of discontinuity between
Indonesian Homo erectus and the earliest Homo sapiens in the Australasian fossil record.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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