4.3 Article

Two Late Pleistocene human femora from Trinil, Indonesia: Implications for body size and behavior in Southeast Asia

期刊

JOURNAL OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
卷 172, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2022.103252

关键词

Femur; Postcrania; Homo; Cross-sectional geometry; Body mass

资金

  1. Treub Foundation
  2. Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University
  3. Dutch Research Council NWO [SBR-8919749]
  4. National Science Foundation [BSC-0642297]
  5. Stichting Nederlands Museum voor Paleoanthropologie en Praehistorie
  6. [SBR-8919155]
  7. [016. Vidi.171.049]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study presents two partial femora from the Trinil site in Indonesia and provides temporal and geographic context for these specimens. The results suggest the presence of small-bodied, active hunter-gatherers in Southeast Asia during the later Late Pleistocene.
Late Pleistocene hominin postcranial specimens from Southeast Asia are relatively rare. Here we describe and place into temporal and geographic context two partial femora from the site of Trinil, Indonesia, which are dated stratigraphically and via Uranium-series direct dating to ca. 37-32 Ica. The specimens, designated Trinil 9 and 10, include most of the diaphysis, with Trinil 9 being much better preserved. Microcomputed tomography is used to determine cross-sectional diaphyseal properties, with an emphasis on midshaft anteroposterior to mediolateral bending rigidity (I-x/I-y), which has been shown to relate to both body shape and activity level in modern humans. The body mass of Trinil 9 is estimated from cortical area and reconstructed length using new equations based on a Pleistocene reference sample. Comparisons are carried out with a large sample of Pleistocene and Holocene East Asian, African, and European/West Asian femora. Our results show that Trinil 9 has a high I-x/I-y ratio, most consistent with a relatively narrow-bodied male from a mobile hunting-gathering population. It has an estimated body mass of 55.4 kg and a stature of 156 cm, which are small relative to Late Pleistocene males worldwide, but larger than the penecontemporaneous Deep Skull femur from Niah Cave, Malaysia, which is very likely female. This suggests the presence of small-bodied active huntergatherers in Southeast Asia during the later Late Pleistocene. Trinil 9 also contrasts strongly in morphology with earlier partial femora from Trinil dating to the late Early-early Middle Pleistocene (Femora II-V), and to a lesser extent with the well-known complete Femur I, most likely dating to the terminal Middle-early Late Pleistocene. Temporal changes in morphology among femoral specimens from Trinil parallel those observed in Homo throughout the Old World during the Pleistocene and document these differences within a single site. (C) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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