New evidence for a 67,000-year-old human presence at Callao Cave, Luzon, Philippines
Files
Download Full Text
Publication Date
July 2010
Abstract
Documentation of early human migrations through Island Southeast Asia and Wallacea en route to Australia has always been problematic due to a lack of well-dated human skeletal remains. The best known modern humans are from Niah Cave in Borneo (40–42 ka), and from Tabon Cave on the island of Palawan, southwest Philippines (47 ± 11 ka). The discovery of Homo floresiensis on the island of Flores in eastern Indonesia has also highlighted the possibilities of identifying new hominin species on islands in the region. Here, we report the discovery of a human third metatarsal from Callao Cave in northern Luzon. Direct dating of the specimen using U-series ablation has provided a minimum age estimate of 66.7 ± 1 ka, making it the oldest known human fossil in the Philippines. Its morphological features, as well as size and shape characteristics, indicate that the Callao metatarsal definitely belongs to the genus Homo. Morphometric analysis of the Callao metatarsal indicates that it has a gracile structure, close to that observed in other small-bodied Homo sapiens. Interestingly, the Callao metatarsal also falls within the morphological and size ranges of Homo habilis and H. floresiensis. Identifying whether the metatarsal represents the earliest record of H. sapiens so far recorded anywhere east of Wallace’s Line requires further archaeological research, but its presence on the isolated island of Luzon over 65,000 years ago further demonstrates the abilities of humans to make open ocean crossings in the Late Pleistocene.
Keywords
Cave Faunas, Hominin Dispersal, Southeast Asia, U-Series Dating
Document Type
Article
Notes
Journal of Human Evolution, Vol. 59, no. 1 (2010-07).
Identifier
SFS0063102_00001
Recommended Citation
Salvador Mijares, Armand; Détroit, Florent; and Piper, Philip, "New evidence for a 67,000-year-old human presence at Callao Cave, Luzon, Philippines" (2010). KIP Articles. 3485.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/kip_articles/3485