Liao Wei, Harrison Terry, Yao Yanyan, Liang Hua, Tian Chun, Feng Yuexing, Li Sheng, Bae Christopher J, Wang Wei
Institute of Cultural Heritage, Shandong University, 72 Jimo-Binhai Road, Qingdao 266237, China.
Center for the Study of Human Origins, Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, NY, 10003, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2022 Sep;170:103233. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2022.103233. Epub 2022 Aug 26.
Pongo fossils with precise absolute age brackets are rare, limiting our understanding of their taxonomy and spatiotemporal distribution in southern China during the Late Pleistocene. Twenty-four isolated teeth of fossil orangutans were recently discovered during excavations at Yicun Cave in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, southern China. Here, we dated the fossil-bearing layer using Uranium-series dating of the associated flowstone and soda straw stalactites. Our results date the Yicun orangutan fossils to between 66 ± 0.32 ka and 57 ± 0.26 ka; thus, these fossils currently represent the last appearance datum of Pongo in southern China. We further conducted a detailed morphological comparison of the Yicun fossil teeth with large samples of fossil (n = 2454) and extant (n = 441) orangutans from mainland and island Southeast Asia to determine their taxonomic position. Compared to other fossil and extant orangutan samples, the Yicun Pongo assemblage has larger teeth and displays greater variation in occlusal structure. Based on the high frequency of cingular remnants and light to moderate enamel wrinkling of the molars, we assigned the Yicun fossils to Pongo weidenreichi, a species that was widespread in southern China throughout the Pleistocene. Lastly, we used published stable carbon isotope data of Early to Late Pleistocene mammalian fossil teeth from mainland Southeast Asia to reconstruct changes in the paleoenvironment and to interpret dental size variation of Pongo assemblages in a broader temporal and environmental context. The carbon isotope data show that dental size reduction in Pongo is associated with environmental changes. These morphological changes in Pongo appear to coincide with the expansion of savannah biomes and the contraction of forest habitats from the Middle Pleistocene onward. The variation in dental size of forest-dwelling Pongo in mainland Southeast Asia may have resulted from habitat differentiation during the Pleistocene.
带有精确绝对年龄范围的猩猩化石十分罕见,这限制了我们对其分类以及晚更新世时期在中国南方的时空分布的了解。最近在中国南方广西壮族自治区的邑村洞发掘过程中发现了24颗孤立的猩猩化石牙齿。在此,我们通过对相关流石和苏打管钟乳石进行铀系测年,确定了含化石层的年代。我们的结果表明,邑村猩猩化石的年代在66±0.32千年前至57±0.26千年前之间;因此,这些化石目前代表了猩猩在中国南方的最后出现时间。我们进一步将邑村化石牙齿与来自东南亚大陆和岛屿的大量化石(n = 2454)和现存(n = 441)猩猩样本进行了详细的形态比较,以确定它们的分类地位。与其他化石和现存猩猩样本相比,邑村猩猩组合的牙齿更大,咬合结构的变异也更大。基于齿带残余的高频率以及臼齿釉质轻度至中度的褶皱,我们将邑村化石归为魏氏猩猩,这是一种在整个更新世都广泛分布于中国南方的物种。最后,我们利用已发表的东南亚大陆早更新世到晚更新世哺乳动物化石牙齿的稳定碳同位素数据,重建古环境变化,并在更广泛的时间和环境背景下解释猩猩组合牙齿大小的变异。碳同位素数据表明,猩猩牙齿大小的减小与环境变化有关。从更新世中期开始,猩猩的这些形态变化似乎与稀树草原生物群落的扩张和森林栖息地的收缩相吻合。东南亚大陆森林栖息猩猩牙齿大小的变异可能是更新世期间栖息地分化的结果。