Evidence for the smallest fossil Pongo in southern China

IF 3.1 1区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Hua Liang , Terry Harrison , Qingfeng Shao , Jean-Jacques Bahain , Jinyou Mo , Yuexing Feng , Wei Liao , Wei Wang
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Abstract

The rarity of Pongo fossils with precise absolute dating from the Middle Pleistocene hampers our understanding of the taxonomy and spatiotemporal distribution of Quaternary orangutans in southern China. Here, we report a newly discovered sample of 113 isolated teeth of fossil Pongo from Zhongshan Cave in the Bubing Basin, Guangxi, southern China. We describe the Pongo specimens from Zhongshan Cave and compare them metrically to other samples of fossil Pongo species (i.e., Pongo weidenreichi, Pongo devosi, Pongo duboisi, Pongo palaeosumatrensis, Pongo javensis, and Pongo sp.) and to extant orangutans (i.e., Pongo pygmaeus and Pongo abelii). The Zhongshan Pongo assemblage is dated using U-series and coupled electron spin resonance/U-series methods. Our results reasonably constrain the Zhongshan Pongo assemblage to 184 ± 16 ka, which is consistent with the biostratigraphic evidence. The Zhongshan Pongo teeth are only 6.5% larger on average than those of extant Pongo. The Zhongshan teeth are smaller overall than those of Pongo from all other cave sites in southern China, and they currently represent the smallest fossil orangutans in southern China. Based on their dental size, and the presence of a well-developed lingual pillar and lingual cingulum on the upper and lower incisors, an intermediate frequency of lingual cingulum remnants on the upper molars, and a higher frequency of moderate to heavy wrinkling on the upper and lower molars, we provisionally assign the Zhongshan fossils to P. devosi. Our results confirm earlier claims that P. weidenreichi is replaced by a smaller species in southern China, P. devosi, by the late Middle Pleistocene. The occurrence of P. devosi in Zhongshan Cave further extends its spatial and temporal distribution. The Pongo specimens from Zhongshan provide important new evidence to demonstrate that the dental morphological features of Pongo in southern China changed substantially during the late Middle Pleistocene.

中国南方发现最小庞戈化石的证据
中更新世具有精确绝对年代的猩猩化石非常罕见,这阻碍了我们对中国南方第四纪猩猩的分类和时空分布的了解。在此,我们报告了在中国南方广西北部湾中山溶洞新发现的113颗孤立的庞戈化石牙齿样本。我们描述了中山洞的猩猩标本,并将其与其他猩猩化石样本(即 Pongo weidenreichi、Pongo devosi、Pongo duboisi、Pongo palaeosumatrensis、Pongo javensis 和 Pongo sp.)以及现生猩猩(即 Pongo pygmaeus 和 Pongo abelii)进行了度量比较。中山猩猩群的年代测定采用了U系列和电子自旋共振/U系列耦合方法。我们的结果合理地将中山庞戈群的年代限定在 184 ± 16 ka,这与生物地层学证据一致。中山庞戈牙齿平均比现存庞戈牙齿大6.5%。中山猿人的牙齿总体上小于中国南方所有其他洞穴遗址的猿人牙齿,是目前中国南方最小的猿人化石。根据它们的牙齿大小,以及上下门齿上发达的舌柱和舌嵴、上臼齿上中等频率的舌嵴残留以及上下臼齿上较高频率的中度至重度皱纹,我们暂时将中山猿化石归类为 P. devosi。我们的研究结果证实了之前的说法,即在中更新世晚期,P. weidenreichi 在中国南方被一个较小的物种 P. devosi 所取代。P. devosi在中山洞的出现进一步扩大了它的时空分布范围。中山的庞果标本提供了重要的新证据,证明华南地区庞果的牙齿形态特征在中更新世晚期发生了重大变化。
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Evolution
Journal of Human Evolution 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
15.60%
发文量
104
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Human Evolution concentrates on publishing the highest quality papers covering all aspects of human evolution. The central focus is aimed jointly at paleoanthropological work, covering human and primate fossils, and at comparative studies of living species, including both morphological and molecular evidence. These include descriptions of new discoveries, interpretative analyses of new and previously described material, and assessments of the phylogeny and paleobiology of primate species. Submissions should address issues and questions of broad interest in paleoanthropology.
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