School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NR, UK; Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, 04103, Germany.
Turkana Basin Institute, PO Box 24926, Nairobi, 00502, Kenya; Department of Anthropology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, 11794, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2020 Aug;145:102820. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2020.102820. Epub 2020 Jun 25.
Increasing evidence for both taxonomic diversity and early stone manufacture during the Pliocene highlights the importance of the hominin fossil record from this epoch in eastern Africa. Here, we describe dental remains from Lomekwi (West Turkana, Kenya), which date from between 3.2 and 3.5 Ma. The sample was collected between 1982 and 2009 and includes five gnathic specimens and a total of 67 teeth (mostly isolated permanent postcanine teeth). Standard linear dimensions indicate that, although the Lomekwi teeth are relatively small, there is broad overlap in size with contemporary Australopithecus afarensis and Australopithecus deyiremeda specimens at most tooth positions. However, some dental characters differentiate this sample from these species, including a relatively large P and M compared with the M, a high incidence of well-developed protostylids, and specific accessory molar cuspules. Owing to a lack of well-preserved tooth crowns (and the complete absence of mandibular teeth) in the holotype and paratype of Kenyanthropus platyops, and limited comparable gnathic morphology in the new specimens, it cannot be determined whether these Lomekwi specimens should be attributed to this species. Attribution of these specimens is further complicated by a lack of certainty about position along the tooth row of many of the molar specimens. More comprehensive shape analyses of the external and internal morphology of these specimens, and additional fossil finds, would facilitate the taxonomic attribution of specimens in this taxonomically diverse period of human evolution.
越来越多的证据表明,在更新世时期,无论是在分类多样性方面还是在早期石器制造方面,东非的人属化石记录都具有重要意义。在这里,我们描述了来自肯尼亚图尔卡纳湖西岸的洛美奎(Lomekwi)的牙齿化石,其年代在 320 万至 350 万年前之间。这些样本采集于 1982 年至 2009 年之间,包括 5 个颌骨标本和总共 67 颗牙齿(主要是孤立的恒后牙)。标准线性尺寸表明,尽管洛美奎的牙齿相对较小,但在大多数牙齿位置上,其尺寸与同时代的南方古猿阿法种和南方古猿源泉种的标本有广泛的重叠。然而,该样本的一些牙齿特征与这些物种有所区别,包括 P 和 M 相对于 M 较大,发育良好的原尖较高,以及特定的附加臼齿小尖。由于肯尼亚平脸人(Kenyanthropus platyops)的正型标本和副型标本缺乏保存完好的牙冠(以及下颌牙齿完全缺失),并且新标本中颌骨形态有限,因此无法确定这些洛美奎的标本是否应该归属于该物种。由于许多臼齿标本的牙列位置不确定,因此这些标本的归属进一步复杂化。对这些标本的外部和内部形态进行更全面的形状分析,并增加其他化石的发现,将有助于在人类进化的这个分类多样性时期对标本进行分类归属。