Centre of Advanced Studies in Geology, Panjab University, Chandigarh 160 014, India.
J Biosci. 2009 Nov;34(5):729. doi: 10.1007/s12038-009-0056-9.
The Indian palaeoanthropological record, although patchy at the moment, is improving rapidly with every new find. This broad review attempts to provide an account of (a) the Late Miocene fossil apes and their gradual disappearance due to ecological shift from forest dominated to grassland dominated ecosystem around 9-8 Ma ago, (b) the Pliocene immigration/evolution of possible hominids and associated fauna, (c) the Pleistocene record of fossil hominins, associated fauna and artifacts, and (d) the Holocene time of permanent settlements and the genetic data from various human cultural groups within India. Around 13 Ma ago (late Middle Miocene) Siwalik forests saw the emergence of an orangutan-like primate Sivapithecus. By 8 Ma, this genus disappeared from the Siwalik region as its habitat started shrinking due to increased aridity influenced by global cooling and monsoon intensification. A contemporary and a close relative of Sivapithecus, Gigantopithecus (Indopithecus), the largest ape that ever-lived, made its first appearance at around 9 Ma. Other smaller primates that were pene-contemporaneous with these apes were Pliopithecus (Dendropithecus), Indraloris, Sivaladapis and Palaeotupia. The Late Pliocene and Early Pleistocene witnessed northern hemisphere glaciations, followed by the spread of arid conditions on a global scale, setting the stage for hominids to explore "Savanahastan". With the prominent expansion of grassland environments from East Africa to China and Indonesia in the Pliocene, monkeys and baboons dispersed into the Indian subcontinent from Africa along with other mammals. Though debated, there are several claims of the presence of early hominins in this part of the world during the Late Pliocene, based primarily on the recovery of Palaeolithic tools. Fossils of our own ancestor and one of the first globe-trotters, early Homo erectus, has been documented from the Early Pleistocene of East Africa, Western Asia and Southeast Asia, thus indirectly pointing towards Indian subcontinent as a possible migration corridor between these regions. The only definite pre-Homo sapiens fossil hominin remains come from the Central Narmada Valley and are thought to be of Middle to late Pleistocene age, and the cranium has been shown to be closely linked to archaic Homo sapiens/H. heidelbergensis of Europe. Around approximately 74,000 yrs ago, a super volcanic eruption in Sumatra caused the deposition of Youngest Toba Tephra, that covered large parts of the Indian peninsula. Just around this time anatomically-and-behaviorally modern humans or Homo sapiens possibly arrived into India as evidenced by the so called Middle and Upper Palaeolithic assemblages and associated symbolic evidence. The available genetic data reveals that the gene pool to which modern Indians races belong was extremely diverse and had variable mixed links with both European and Asian populations.
印度古人类学记录虽然目前还很零散,但随着每一次新发现,其发展速度正在迅速提高。本综述试图提供以下内容的说明:(a)晚中新世的化石猿类及其因 9-8 百万年前生态系统从森林主导型向草原主导型转变而逐渐消失;(b)可能的原始人类及其相关动物群的上新世移民/进化;(c)更新世化石原始人类、相关动物群和人工制品的记录;(d)全新世永久定居的时间以及印度各个人类文化群体的遗传数据。大约 1300 万年前(中中新世晚期),西瓦立克森林中出现了一种类似于猩猩的灵长类动物西瓦古猿。到 800 万年前,由于全球变冷和季风增强导致的干旱影响,其栖息地开始缩小,这个属便从西瓦立克地区消失了。西瓦古猿的一个同时代和近亲,巨猿(印度猩猩),是有史以来最大的猿类,大约在 900 万年前首次出现。与这些猿类同时存在的其他较小的灵长类动物是上新世的猕猴(山毛榉猴)、印度古猿(印度猩猩)、西瓦拉迪皮斯和古巨猿。晚上新世和早更新世见证了北半球的冰川作用,随后全球范围内出现了干旱条件的蔓延,为原始人类探索“萨凡纳斯坦”创造了条件。上新世期间,草原环境从东非显著扩张到中国和印度尼西亚,猴子和狒狒与其他哺乳动物一起从非洲扩散到印度次大陆。尽管存在争议,但根据旧石器时代工具的发现,有几项关于晚期上新世世界某些地区早期原始人类存在的说法。我们自己祖先和最早的环球旅行者之一早期直立人的化石已经在东非、西亚和东南亚的早更新世被记录下来,这间接指向印度次大陆是这些地区之间可能的迁徙走廊。唯一确定的原始人类之前的古人类化石遗骸来自中央纳尔马达河谷,被认为属于中更新世到晚更新世,头骨已被证明与欧洲的古老智人/海德堡人密切相关。大约在 74000 年前,苏门答腊的一次超级火山爆发导致了托巴火山灰的沉积,这些火山灰覆盖了印度半岛的大部分地区。就在这个时候,具有解剖学和行为学意义的现代人类或智人可能已经进入印度,这可以从所谓的中石器时代和新石器时代的组合以及相关的象征性证据中得到证明。现有的遗传数据显示,现代印度种族所属的基因库非常多样化,并且与欧洲和亚洲人口有着不同的混合联系。