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EbS to Air Long Special on EU-China
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Sex Culture Festival Opens in Guangzhou
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Lethal Container Blast: 5 Critically
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Carnival Completes Its Spin
Growing Up Hard for Single Child
Generation
Growing up Hard for Single Child
Generation
Skies Open to China's New Jet Set
Cat Dropping Experiment
Stirs Pet Welfare Concerns
China to Intensify Toys'
Quality Control
The Daur Ethnic Group
Substandard Toys on Display
Child Safety Cited in Call for Better
Toy Quality
Boy Returned to Parents
House Seekers Search for Dream
Young Panchen Lama Sees 'Great Historic
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10 New Jobs in Search of Skilled Workers
Female and Male: Different but Equal
Folk Arts Celebrating the Coming New Year
Avant-garde Desinger Showcases History
on T-shirts
Migrant Workers Call the Shots
Migrant Workers Call the
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Indonesia Is Crying
Stone Lions Tell of a Tradition's Rise and Fall
Nation Lacking Laborers
Export Mix Adjustment Urged
Faye Wong's Love: To Be or Not to Be
Toys Tariff Lifting to Spark Fierce Rivalry
Gift Makers Witness 'Chilly Christmas'
Scientists Find 178 New Species
in Oceans
Beijing Olympiad: Profit or Loss?
Scientists Find Prehistoric Dwarf Skeleton
Taiwan IT Sector Loyal to Mainland
Music Fans Tune up for Beijing Festival
Magic Masters All: the Elite Eight
Set to Puzzle Beijing
New Standards to Improve Toy Safety
Quality of Sex Products Sparks Concern
Factory Closed for Using Child
Labor
Largest Birthday Teddy Bear Adds to Fun
to HK
Beijingers to Embrace Disney on Ice
Animated Life
A Painter and His Panda Complex
Inferior Toys Threaten Children's
Health
Loved Woman Police Chief Mourned
Grisly Toys Face Market Ban: Official
Toy Safety Standards to Be Tightened
Safety Standard for Toys to be Tghtened
Sassy Girl Gets Back to Business
Kitchen Hand Scores High in TOEFL
Red-hot Passion
Kitchen Hand Scores High in TOEFL
Guide to Cancer Prevention
Women in the Workplace: A Great Leap
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Vanessa-Mae: Flirting from Classicality
to Popularity
New Toy Quality Standard Set
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'Rings' Sweeping Oscars with 10
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Tony Leung Born to Be An Actor
Toy Dolls For Valentine's Day
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Fingers Do the Talking
Robot Wars Come to Beijing
Preparations for Christmas with Mass Toys,
Gifts Exports
Director Zhang Yang Prepares for His
Latest Flick
UNICEF Helps Needy Kids in China
Taiwan Makes an Entrance
International Toy Makers Try to Solve
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Process
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in Shanghai
Toy Export to Exceed US$10 Billion
in 2003
Pottery Pooches a Lasting Legacy of Han
Dynasty
Culture of the
Three Gorges Area in Paleolithic Era
Alleged Kidnappers Arrested in Southeast
China Province
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China's Pretty Ghosts from Hell
Toymakers Face Bleak Future
The Creative Magic of Bamboo
Short War to Have Limited Impact
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A Lifetime of Juggling Diabolos
Chinese Buy Wool, Cashmere
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Adult Toys, Under Regulated, Overpriced
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Scientists Find Prehistoric
Dwarf Skeleton
In an astonishing discovery that could rewrite the history of human evolution,
scientists say they have found the skeleton of a new human species, a
dwarf, marooned for eons in a tropical Lost World while modern man rapidly
colonized the rest of the planet.
The finding on a remote Indonesian island has stunned anthropologists
like no other in recent memory. It is a fundamentally new creature that
bears more of a resemblance to fictional, barefooted hobbits than modern
humans.
Yet biologically speaking, it may have been closely related to us and
perhaps even shared its caves with our ancestors.
The 3-foot-tall adult female skeleton found in a cave is believed 18,000
years old. It smashes the long-cherished scientific belief that our species,
Homo sapiens, systematically crowded out other upright-walking human cousins
beginning 160,000 years ago and that we've had Earth to ourselves for
tens of thousands of years.
Instead, it suggests recent evolution was more complex than previously
thought.
And it demonstrates that Africa, the acknowledged cradle of humanity,
does not hold all the answers to persistent questions of how -- and where
-- we came to be.
"This finding really does rewrite our knowledge of human evolution,"
said Chris Stringer, who directs human origins studies at the Natural
History Museum in London. "And to have them present less than 20,000
years ago is frankly astonishing."
Scientists called the dwarf skeleton "the most extreme" figure
to be included in the extended human family. Certainly, she is the shortest.
She is the best example of a trove of fragmented bones that account for
as many as seven of these primitive individuals that lived on the equatorial
island of Flores, located east of Java and northwest of Australia. The
mostly intact female skeleton was found in September 2003.
Scientists have named the extinct species Homo floresiensis, or Flores
Man, and details appear in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.
The specimens' ages range from 95,000 to 12,000 years old, meaning they
lived until the threshold of recorded human history and perhaps crossed
paths with the ancestors of today's islanders.
Flores Man was hardly formidable. His grapefruit-sized brain was two-thirds
smaller than ours, and closer to the brains of today's chimpanzees and
transitional prehuman species in Africa than vanished 2 million years
ago.
Yet Flores Man made stone tools, lit fires and organized group hunts for
meat. Bones of fish, birds and rodents found near the skeleton were charred,
suggesting they were cooked.
All this suggests Flores Man lived communally and communicated effectively,
perhaps even verbally.
"It is arguably the most significant discovery concerning our own
genus in my lifetime," said anthropologist Bernard Wood of George
Washington University, who reviewed the research independently.
Discoveries simply "don't get any better than that," proclaimed
Robert Foley and Marta Mirazon Lahr of Cambridge University in a written
analysis.
To others, the species' baffling combination of slight dimensions and
coarse features bears almost no meaningful comparison either to modern
humans or to our larger, archaic cousins.
They suggest that Flores Man doesn't belong in the genus Homo at all,
even if it was a recent contemporary. But they are unsure where to classify
it.
"I don't think anybody can pigeonhole this into the very simple-minded
theories of what is human," anthropologist Jeffrey Schwartz of the
University of Pittsburgh. "There is no biological reason to call
it Homo. We have to rethink what it is."
For now, most researchers have been limited to examining digital photographs
of the specimens. The female partial skeleton and other fragments are
stored in a laboratory in Jakarta, Indonesia.
Researchers from Australia and Indonesia found the partial skeleton 13
months ago in a shallow limestone cave known as Liang Bua. The cave, which
extends into a hillside for about 130 feet, has been the subject of scientific
analysis since 1964. Fenced off and patrolled by guards, it is surrounded
by coffee farms.
Older stone tools and other artifacts previously found on the island
suggest that Flores Man is part of a substantial archaic human lineage.
"So the 18,000-year-old skeleton cannot be some kind of 'freak'
that we just happened to stumble across," said one of the discoverers,
radiocarbon dating expert Richard G. Roberts of the University of Wollongong
in Australia.
But the environment in which Flores Man lived was indeed peculiar, and
scientists say it probably contributed to the specimen's unusually small
dimensions.
Millenia ago, Flores was a kind of a looking-glass world, a real-life
Middle-earth inhabited by a menagerie of fantastical creatures like giant
tortoises, elephants as small as ponies and rats as big as hunting dogs.
It even had a dragon, although they were giant lizards like today's carnivorous
Komodo dragons rather than the treasure-hoarding Smaug described by novelist
J.R.R. Tolkien in his "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.
Artifacts suggest that a big-boned human cousin, Homo erectus, migrated
from Java to Flores and other islands, perhaps by bamboo raft, nearly
1 million years ago.
Researchers suspect that Flores Man probably is an H. erectus descendant
that was squeezed by the pressures of natural selection.
Nature is full of mammals -- deer, squirrels and pigs, for example --
living in marginal, isolated environments that gradually dwarf when food
isn't plentiful and predators aren't threatening.
This is the first time that the evolution of dwarfism has been recorded
in a human relative, said the study's lead author, Peter Brown of the
University of New England in Australia.
Just how this primitive, remnant species managed to hang on is uncertain.
Inbreeding certainly would've been a danger. Geologic evidence suggests
a massive volcanic eruption sealed its fate some 12,000 years ago, along
with other unusual island species like the dwarf elephant species, stegodon.
Now, scientists are more puzzled by the specimen's jumble of features
that appear to be borrowed from different human ancestors.
This much is clear: Its worn teeth and fused skull show it was an adult.
The shape of the pelvis is female. The skull is wide like H. erectus.
But the sides are rounder and the crown traces an arc from ear to ear.
The skull of H. erectus has straight sides and a pointed crown, they said.
The lower jaw contains large, blunt teeth and roots like Australopithecus,
a prehuman ancestor in Africa more than 3 million years ago. The front
teeth are smaller and more like modern human teeth.
The eye sockets are big and round, but unlike other members of the Homo
genus, it has hardly any chin or browline.
The rest of the skeleton looks as if it walked upright, but the pelvis
and the shinbone have primitive, even apelike features.
Bones from the species' feet and hands have not yet been found. Delicate
artifacts found in the cave were described as "toy-sized" versions
of stone tools made by H. erectus. They suggest that Flores Man retained
intelligence and dexterity to flake small weapons with sharp edges, even
if its body shrunk over time.
"I've spent a sleepless night trying to figure out what to do with
this thing," said Schwartz. "It's a mind-blower. It makes me
think of nothing else in this world."
Even more speculative is whether Flores Man met with modern humans, and
what might've happened.
Folklore experts have reported persistent legends of little people living
on Flores and nearby islands. Islanders called the creature "Ebu
Gogo" and say it was about 3 feet tall.
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