Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland, Australia.
Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 1;13(11):e0204737. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204737. eCollection 2018.
Scholars have debated the taxonomic identity of isolated primate teeth from the Asian Pleistocene for over a century, which is complicated by morphological and metric convergence between orangutan (Pongo) and hominin (Homo) molariform teeth. Like Homo erectus, Pongo once showed considerable dental variation and a wide distribution throughout mainland and insular Asia. In order to clarify the utility of isolated dental remains to document the presence of hominins during Asian prehistory, we examined enamel thickness, enamel-dentine junction shape, and crown development in 33 molars from G. H. R. von Koenigswald's Chinese Apothecary collection (11 Sinanthropus officinalis [= Homo erectus], 21 "Hemanthropus peii," and 1 "Hemanthropus peii" or Pongo) and 7 molars from Sangiran dome (either Homo erectus or Pongo). All fossil teeth were imaged with non-destructive conventional and/or synchrotron micro-computed tomography. These were compared to H. erectus teeth from Zhoukoudian, Sangiran and Trinil, and a large comparative sample of fossil Pongo, recent Pongo, and recent human teeth. We find that Homo and Pongo molars overlap substantially in relative enamel thickness; molar enamel-dentine junction shape is more distinctive, with Pongo showing relatively shorter dentine horns and wider crowns than Homo. Long-period line periodicity values are significantly greater in Pongo than in H. erectus, leading to longer crown formation times in the former. Most of the sample originally assigned to S. officinalis and H. erectus shows greater affinity to Pongo than to the hominin comparative sample. Moreover, enamel thickness, enamel-dentine junction shape, and a long-period line periodicity value in the "Hemanthropus peii" sample are indistinguishable from fossil Pongo. These results underscore the need for additional recovery and study of associated dentitions prior to erecting new taxa from isolated teeth.
学者们对亚洲更新世孤立灵长类牙齿的分类身份争论了一个多世纪,这是由于猩猩(Pongo)和人属(Homo)类人猿牙齿在形态和度量上的趋同而变得复杂。与直立人一样,猩猩曾经表现出相当大的牙齿变异,并广泛分布于亚洲大陆和岛屿。为了阐明孤立牙齿遗骸在记录亚洲史前人类存在方面的作用,我们检查了 33 颗牙齿的釉质厚度、釉牙本质交界处形状和牙冠发育,这些牙齿来自 G. H. R. von Koenigswald 的中国药剂师收藏(11 颗北京人[=直立人]、21 颗“赫曼托普斯 peii”和 1 颗“赫曼托普斯 peii”或猩猩)和 Sangiran 穹顶的 7 颗牙齿(要么是直立人要么是猩猩)。所有化石牙齿都使用无损常规和/或同步加速器微计算机断层扫描进行成像。这些与周口店、 Sangiran 和 Trinil 的直立人牙齿以及大量化石猩猩、现代猩猩和现代人类牙齿进行了比较。我们发现,在相对釉质厚度方面,人类和猩猩的牙齿有很大的重叠;磨牙釉牙本质交界处形状更为独特,猩猩的牙本质角相对较短,牙冠较宽。在 Pongo 中,长周期线周期性值明显大于在 Homo erectus 中,导致前者的牙冠形成时间更长。最初分配给 S. officinalis 和 H. erectus 的大部分样本与 Pongo 的亲缘关系大于与人类比较样本的亲缘关系。此外,“赫曼托普斯 peii”样本的釉质厚度、釉牙本质交界处形状和长周期线周期性值与化石猩猩无法区分。这些结果强调了在从孤立牙齿建立新分类群之前,需要对相关牙列进行额外的回收和研究。