Pickering Travis Rayne, Heaton Jason L, Sutton Morris B, Clarke Ron J, Kuman Kathleen, Senjem Jess Hutton, Brain C K
Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 53706, USA; Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, WITS, 2050, South Africa; Plio-Pleistocene Palaeontology Section, Department of Vertebrates, Ditsong National Museum of Natural History (Transvaal Museum), Pretoria, South Africa.
Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, WITS, 2050, South Africa; Plio-Pleistocene Palaeontology Section, Department of Vertebrates, Ditsong National Museum of Natural History (Transvaal Museum), Pretoria, South Africa; Department of Biology, Birmingham-Southern College, Birmingham, AL, 35245, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2016 Nov;100:1-15. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2016.08.005.
We describe 14 hominin teeth and tooth fragments excavated recently from Swartkrans Cave (South Africa). The fossils derive from Members 1 (Lower Bank) and 3, from the Member 2/3 interface and from two deposits not yet assigned to member (the "Talus Cone Deposit" and the "Underground North Excavation" [UNE]) of the Swartkrans Formation, and include the first hominin fossil from the UNE, the two smallest Paranthropus robustus deciduous maxillary second molars in the entire hominin fossil record, and one of the smallest P. robustus permanent maxillary second molars from Swartkrans. The small permanent molar is accompanied by another tooth from a different individual but from the same stratigraphic level of the Swartkrans Formation; this second tooth is among, if not, the largest P. robustus permanent maxillary first molars known from anywhere-lending credence to assertions that degrees of body size sexual dimorphism previously ascribed to this species may be underestimated. It is more equivocal whether this evidence also supports hypotheses proposing that P. robustus assemblages from Swartkrans (as well as those from other South African cave sites) formed through the taphonomically biasing actions of large carnivores.
我们描述了最近从南非斯瓦特克朗斯洞穴发掘出的14颗古人类牙齿和牙齿碎片。这些化石来自斯瓦特克朗斯组的第1层(下岸)和第3层、第2/3层界面以及两个尚未归入某一层的沉积物(“距骨锥沉积物”和“地下北部发掘点”[UNE]),其中包括UNE的首个古人类化石、整个人类化石记录中最小的两颗粗壮傍人上颌乳第二磨牙,以及斯瓦特克朗斯最小的粗壮傍人上颌恒第二磨牙之一。这颗小恒磨牙与来自斯瓦特克朗斯组同一地层但不同个体的另一颗牙齿伴存;这颗第二颗牙齿即便不是已知最大的粗壮傍人上颌恒第一磨牙,也是最大的之一,这使人们更加相信此前归因于该物种的体型两性差异程度可能被低估了。至于这一证据是否也支持如下假说则更难确定,该假说认为斯瓦特克朗斯(以及其他南非洞穴遗址)的粗壮傍人组合是大型食肉动物在埋藏学上的偏向作用形成的。