Antón S C
Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1997 Apr;102(4):497-514. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-8644(199704)102:4<497::AID-AJPA6>3.0.CO;2-P.
An increasing number of claims place hominids outside Africa and deep in Southeast Asia at about the same time that Homo erectus first appears in Africa. The most complete of the early specimens is the partial child's calvaria from Mojokerto (Perning I), Java, Indonesia. Discovered in 1936, the child has been assigned to Australopithecus and multiple species of Homo, including H. modjokertensis, and given developmental ages ranging from 1-8 years. This study systematically assesses Mojokerto relative to modern human and fossil hominid growth series and relative to adult fossil hominids. Cranial base and vault comparisons between Mojokerto and H. sapiens sapiens (Hss) (n = 56), Neandertal (n = 4), and H. erectus (n = 4) juveniles suggest a developmental age range between 4 and 6 years. This range is based in part on new standards for assessing the relative development of the glenoid fossa. Regression analyses of vault arcs and chords indicate that H. erectus juveniles have more rounded frontals and less angulated occipitals than their adult counterparts, whereas Hss juveniles do not show these differences relative to adults. The growth of the cranial superstructures and face appear critical to creating differences in vault contours between H. erectus and Hss. In comparison with adult H. erectus and early Homo (n = 27) and adult Hss (n = 179), the Mojokerto child is best considered a juvenile H. erectus on the basis of synapomorphies of the cranial vault, particularly a metopic eminence and occipital torus, as well as a suite of characters that describe but do not define H. erectus, including obelion depression, supratoral gutter, postorbital constriction, mastoid fissure, lack of sphenoid contribution to glenoid fossa, and length and breadth ratios of the temporomandibular joint. Mojokerto is similar to other juvenile H. erectus in the degree of development of its cranial superstructures and its vault contours relative to adult Indonesian specimens. The synapomorphies which Mojokerto shares with H. erectus are often considered autapomorphies of Asian H. erectus and confirm the early establishment and long-term continuity of the Asian H. erectus bauplan. This continuity does not, however, necessarily reflect on the pattern of origin of modern humans in the region.
越来越多的主张认为,在直立人首次出现在非洲的大致同一时期,原始人类已走出非洲并深入东南亚。早期标本中最完整的是来自印度尼西亚爪哇莫佐克托(珀宁一号)的部分儿童头盖骨。该儿童于1936年被发现,曾被归类为南方古猿以及多种人属物种,包括莫佐克托人,其发育年龄在1至8岁之间。本研究系统地评估了莫佐克托与现代人类和化石原始人类生长序列的关系,以及与成年化石原始人类的关系。莫佐克托与智人(Hss)(n = 56)、尼安德特人(n = 4)和直立人(n = 4)青少年的颅底和颅顶比较表明,其发育年龄在4至6岁之间。这个范围部分基于评估关节盂相对发育的新标准。颅顶弧线和弦的回归分析表明,直立人青少年的额部比成年直立人更圆润,枕部的角度比成年直立人小,而智人青少年与成年人相比则没有这些差异。颅上部结构和面部的生长似乎对造成直立人和智人颅顶轮廓的差异至关重要。与成年直立人和早期人属(n = 27)以及成年智人(n = 179)相比,基于颅顶的共有衍征,特别是额缝隆起和枕骨隆突,以及一系列描述但未定义直立人的特征,包括头顶凹陷、眶上沟、眶后缩窄、乳突裂、蝶骨对关节盂无贡献以及颞下颌关节的长宽比,莫佐克托儿童最好被视为直立人青少年。相对于成年印度尼西亚标本,莫佐克托在颅上部结构的发育程度及其颅顶轮廓方面与其他直立人青少年相似。莫佐克托与直立人共有的共有衍征通常被认为是亚洲直立人的自有衍征,证实了亚洲直立人模式的早期确立和长期延续。然而,这种连续性不一定反映该地区现代人类的起源模式。