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Homo longi

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Homo longi
Temporal range: Middle Pleistocene 0.146 Ma
HBSM2018-000018(A) cranium. Scale bar = 50mm
HBSM2018-000018(A) cranium
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Hominidae
Subfamily: Homininae
Tribe: Hominini
Genus: Homo
Species:
H. longi
Binomial name
Homo longi
Ji et al., 2021

Homo longi is an extinct species of archaic human identified from a nearly complete skull, nicknamed 'Dragon Man', from Harbin on the Northeast China Plain, dating to at minimum 146,000 years ago during the Middle Pleistocene. The skull was discovered in 1933 along the Songhua River while the Dongjiang Bridge [zh] was under construction for the Manchukuo National Railway. Due to a tumultuous wartime atmosphere, it was hidden and only brought to paleoanthropologists in 2018. H. longi has been hypothesized to be the same species as the Denisovans, but this cannot be confirmed without genetic testing.

H. longi is broadly anatomically similar to other Middle Pleistocene Chinese specimens. Like other archaic humans, the skull is low and long, with massively developed brow ridges, wide eye sockets, and a large mouth. The skull is the longest ever found from any human species. Like modern humans, the face is rather flat, but with a larger nose. The brain volume was 1,420 cc, within the range of modern humans and Neanderthals.

Taxonomy

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Homo longi is located in China
Harbin
Harbin
Xiahe
Xiahe
Denisova Cave
Denisova Cave
Locations of the Harbin skull and the Denisovan remains, which Ni et al., 2021, hypothesized represent the same species.[1]
The skull was discovered in 1933 along Dongjiang Bridge [zh] (above), then under construction by Manchukuo National Railway.

Etymology

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The specific name for H. longi is derived from the geographic name Longjiang (literally "Dragon River"), a term commonly used for the Chinese province Heilongjiang.[2]

Discovery

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In 1933, a local laborer found a nearly complete skull at the riverbank of Songhua River, when he was building the Dongjiang Bridge [zh] in Harbin (at the time part of Manchukuo) for the Japanese-aligned Manchukuo National Railway. Recognizing its importance, likely as a result of public interest in anthropology that had recently been generated by the Peking Man in 1929, just four years before, he hid it from the Manchukuo authorities in an abandoned well.[1]

In 1945, upon the Soviet invasion of Manchuria that ended the Japanese occupation of the region, he concealed his former employment from the Nationalist and later the Communist authorities. Consequently, he could not report the skull, lest he divulge his ties to the Japanese imperialists in explaining its origin.[1]

In 2018, before his death, the third generation of his family learned of the skull, and reclaimed it. Later that year, Chinese paleoanthropologist Ji Qiang persuaded the family to donate it to the Hebei GEO University for study, where it has since been stored. Its catalogue number is HBSM2018-000018(A).[1]

Age

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Owing to the skull's history, its exact provenance, and thus its stratigraphic context and age, has been difficult to determine.[3][4]

In 2021, Chinese geologist Shao Qingfeng and colleagues performed non-destructive x-ray fluorescence, rare-earth element, and strontium isotope analyses on the skull and various other mammalian fossils unearthed around Dongjiang Bridge, and determined that all the fossils from the vicinity were likely deposited at around the same time, lived in the same region, and probably originate from the Upper Huangshan Formation, dating to 309 to 138 thousand years ago.[3]

Direct uranium–thorium dating of various points on the skull yielded a wide range of dates, from 296 to 62 thousand years ago, likely a result of uranium leaching. They statistically determined the most likely minimum age is 146,000 years old, but a more exact value is difficult to determine, given that the exact provenance is unidentifiable. Nonetheless, the skull is well-constrained to the late Middle Pleistocene, roughly contemporaneous with other Chinese specimens from Xiahe, Jinniushan, Dali, and Hualong Cave.[3]

Classification

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A proposed recent human family tree
According to Ni et al. 2021[1] (note, Xiahe and Denisovans are most closely related to Neanderthals according to nDNA and ancient protein analyses.[5])

In two simultaneously published papers, Ji and colleagues declared the Harbin skull to represent a new species they dubbed Homo longi. The Harbin skull is quite similar to the Dali skull, and when the Dali skull was discovered in 1978, it was given a new nomen H. sapiens daliensis by its discoverer Wu Xinzhi who soon thereafter abandoned the name. Consequently, should the Middle Pleistocene Asian humans represent a single unique species, the nomen H. daliensis might take priority. Though they recommended resurrecting H. daliensis, they argued H. longi is sufficiently distinct, and allocated only the Dali and Hualong remains (often allocated to H. heidelbergensis by convention) to H. daliensis; thus, they claim at least two human species inhabited late Middle Pleistocene China.[2] One of the authors, Chris Stringer, stated that he would have preferred assigning the Harbin skull to H. daliensis.[6] However, according to a more recent assessment (including among its authors Xijun Ni, one of the describers of the species H. longi), since Wu wrote only that "it is suggested that Dali cranium probably represents a new subspecies" (p. 538, italics added for emphasis) the name daliensis was never validly published according to International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) rules, being proposed conditionally and published after 1960 (and not formally proposed by subsequent workers in the intervening period), and is therefore unavailable and thus could not compete with longi for priority.[7]

Based on the conspicuously massive size of the molars, they suggested H. longi is most closely related to and possibly the same species as the Xiahe mandible from Tibet,[2] which has been grouped with the enigmatic Denisovans, an archaic human lineage apparently dispersed across East Asia during the Middle and Late Pleistocene currently identifiable from only a genetic signature. The Xiahe mandible is also anatomically similar to specimens from Xujiayao and Penghu.[5] Ji, Ni and colleagues further contend that Middle Pleistocene Asian specimens are more closely related to modern humans (H. sapiens) than the European Neanderthals,[2][1] though nuclear DNA and ancient protein analyses place the Xiahe mandible and Denisovans more closely to Neanderthals than to modern humans.[5][8]

Anatomy

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H. longi is characterized by a low and long skull, receding forehead, extremely wide upper face, a large nasal opening equating to an enlarged nose (possibly an adaptation to the cold air), large and square eye sockets, inflated and thick brow ridges (supraorbital torus), flat cheekbones (zygomatic bone), a wide palate and large tooth sockets (equating to a large mouth), and a broad base of the skull.[2] The Harbin skull measures 221.3 mm × 164.1 mm (8.7 in × 6.5 in) in maximum length x breadth, with a naso-occipital length of 212.9 mm (8.4 in), making it the longest archaic human skull to date.[1] For comparison, the dimensions of a modern human skull average 176 mm × 145 mm (6.9 in × 5.7 in) for men and 171 mm × 140 mm (6.7 in × 5.5 in) for women.[9] The Harbin skull also has the longest brow ridge at 145.7 mm (5.74 in).[1]

The Harbin skull is similar to the contemporaneous Dali skull (reconstruction above).[1]

H. longi had a massive brain at roughly 1,420 cc, above the range of all known human species except modern humans and Neanderthals. Nonetheless, post-orbital constriction (a constriction of the braincase just behind the eyes, absent in modern humans, and equating to the location of the frontal lobes) is more developed in H. longi than in Neanderthals, although not so much as in more-ancient human species.[2] Overall, the braincase retains an array of archaic features, though the occipital bone at the back of the skull has a weakly-defined sagittal keel that lacks a protuberance at the midpoint, unlike most other archaic humans. Unlike the Dali and Hualong Cave skulls, the keel does not run across the midline. Unlike modern humans or Neanderthals, the parietal bones on the top of the head do not significantly expand or protrude.[1]

Despite the face being so wide, it was rather flat (reduced mid-facial prognathism), and resembles the anatomy found in modern humans, the far more ancient H. antecessor, and other Middle Pleistocene Chinese specimens. Nonetheless, the tooth sockets for the incisors were angled outward (alveolar prognathism). The H. longi skull's mosaic morphology of archaic and derived traits converges with some of the earliest specimens assigned to H. sapiens from Africa, notably Rabat[10] and Eliye Springs. Because the original describers judged the Harbin skull to be closely allied with the Xiahe mandible, they believed H. longi lacked a chin, like other archaic humans, but the specimen's lower jaw was not recovered.[1] The only preserved tooth, the upper left second molar, is enormous, with a length x breadth (mesiodistal x labiolingual) of 13.6 mm × 16.6 mm (0.54 in × 0.65 in), comparable to the Denisovan molar recovered from Denisova Cave. The Harbin molar is oval-shaped, badly worn, and nearly flat.[1] In contrast, the average dimensions of a sample of 40 modern human male molars were 10.2 mm × 11.8 mm (0.40 in × 0.46 in).[11]

Ni and colleagues believed the Harbin skull represents a male, judging by the robustness and size of the skull, who was less than 50 years old, looking at the suture closures and the degree of tooth wearing. They speculated H. longi had perhaps medium-dark to medium-light skin, dark hair, and dark eye color based on reconstructed genetic sequences from Neanderthals, Denisovans, and early modern humans.[1]

Pathology

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The left parietal features shallow indents around the bregma, possibly from a healed injury. The second left upper molar does not appear to have been in contact with the third molar, which means either that the third molar was small (creating a gap), or it was absent in this individual.[1]

Paleoenvironment

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Middle-Late Pleistocene sediments around Harbin from which the skull is thought to originate also contain the remains of the giant deer Sinomegaceros ordosianus, wild horse, elk/wapiti, the buffalo Bubalus wansijocki, brown bear,[3](see supplemental material) tigers, cave lions, woolly mammoth and woolly rhinoceros.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ni, X.; Ji, Q.; Wu, W.; et al. (2021). "Massive cranium from Harbin in northeastern China establishes a new Middle Pleistocene human lineage". The Innovation. 2 (3): 100130. Bibcode:2021Innov...200130N. doi:10.1016/j.xinn.2021.100130. ISSN 2666-6758. PMC 8454562. PMID 34557770. S2CID 236784246.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Ji, Qiang; Wu, Wensheng; Ji, Yannan; Li, Qiang; Ni, Xijun (2021-06-25). "Late Middle Pleistocene Harbin cranium represents a new Homo species". The Innovation. 2 (3): 100132. Bibcode:2021Innov...200132J. doi:10.1016/j.xinn.2021.100132. ISSN 2666-6758. PMC 8454552. PMID 34557772.
  3. ^ a b c d Shao, Q.; Ge, J.; Ji, Q.; et al. (2021). "Geochemical provenancing and direct dating of the Harbin archaic human cranium". The Innovation. 2 (3): 100131. Bibcode:2021Innov...200131S. doi:10.1016/j.xinn.2021.100131. PMC 8454624. PMID 34557771. S2CID 237181197.
  4. ^ Gibbons, A. (2021). "Stunning 'Dragon Man' skull may be an elusive Denisovan—or a new species of human". Science. doi:10.1126/science.abk1691 (inactive 1 November 2024).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
  5. ^ a b c Chen, F.; Welker, F.; Shen, C.-C.; et al. (2019). "A late Middle Pleistocene Denisovan mandible from the Tibetan Plateau" (PDF). Nature. 569 (7756): 409–412. Bibcode:2019Natur.569..409C. doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1139-x. PMID 31043746. S2CID 141503768.
  6. ^ Sample, Ian (25 June 2021). "Massive human head in Chinese well forces scientists to rethink evolution". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  7. ^ Bae, Christopher J.; Liu, Wu; Wu, Xiujie; Zhang, Yameng; Ni, Xijun (2023-11-13). ""Dragon man" prompts rethinking of Middle Pleistocene hominin systematics in Asia". The Innovation. 4 (6): 100527. Bibcode:2023Innov...400527B. doi:10.1016/j.xinn.2023.100527. ISSN 2666-6758. PMC 10661591. PMID 38028133.
  8. ^ Reich, D.; Green, R. E.; Kircher, M.; et al. (2010). "Genetic history of an archaic hominin group from Denisova Cave in Siberia" (PDF). Nature. 468 (7327): 1053–60. Bibcode:2010Natur.468.1053R. doi:10.1038/nature09710. hdl:10230/25596. PMC 4306417. PMID 21179161.
  9. ^ Li, H.; Ruan, J.; Xie, Z.; Wang, H.; Liu, W. (2007). "Investigation of the critical geometric characteristics of living human skulls utilising medical image analysis techniques". International Journal of Vehicle Safety. 2 (4): 345–367. doi:10.1504/IJVS.2007.016747.
  10. ^ Saban, Roger (1977). "The Place of Rabat Man (Kebibat, Morocco) in Human Evolution". Current Anthropology. 18 (3): 518–524. doi:10.1086/201932. ISSN 0011-3204. JSTOR 2741407. S2CID 144069991.
  11. ^ Bjorndal, A. M.; Henderson, W. G.; Skidmore, A. E.; Kellner, F. H. (1974). "Anatomic measurements of human teeth extracted from males between the ages of 17 and 21 years". Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology. 38 (5): 795. doi:10.1016/0030-4220(74)90402-2. PMID 4530970.
  12. ^ Sherani, Shaheer; Perng, Liongvi; Sherani, Maryam (2023-06-03). "Evidence of cave lion ( Panthera spelaea ) from Pleistocene Northeast China". Historical Biology. 35 (6): 988–996. doi:10.1080/08912963.2022.2071711. ISSN 0891-2963.

Bibliography

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