New
Fossil Human Species Thwarts Core Darwinian Predictions
April
19, 2019, 4:19 AM
[[Note passages below that I put in bold. D.G.]]
The rewriting of the evolutionary
narrative of human origins is proceeding at such an unbelievable pace that I am
running out of new ways to introduce my comments on the latest findings. Just a
few weeks ago, for Evolution News and ID the Future, I discussed the ongoing
rewriting of human fossil history in Asia (Bechly 2018, 2019, Klinghoffer 2019). Now a new fossil species of
our genus Homo from the Late Pleistocene of the Philippines
has been described in Nature by Détroit et al. (2019), and guess what, the
media again report this discovery as they’ve done in the past, saying that it
“…May Rewrite Human History” (Joyce 2019), etc. I can hardly resist the
temptation to say “I told you so,” or to jokingly remark, “Oops, they did it
again.” Let’s instead have a closer look at the actual evidence and the
implications of this new discovery.
Remains from Callao Cave
The digs were led by Dr. Armand
Mijares from the University of the Philippines and the study conducted by Dr.
Florent Détroit from the National Museum of Natural History in Paris. In
their Naturepaper they describe the new species Homo
luzonensis from 7 isolated teeth, 2 finger bones, 3 feet bones, and a
thigh fragment. The remains were discovered in Callao Cave on Luzon Island, in
the Philippines. These hominin fossils were recovered during excavations in
2007, 2011, and 2015, and have been radiometrically dated to a Late Pleistocene
age of 50,000-67,000 years. A foot bone unearthed in 2007 was already described
by Mijares et al. (2010) and similarities
to Homo floresiensis and Homo habilis mentioned,
but it was not yet named as a new species and an attribution to Homo
sapiens was not ruled out. Last year the discovery of stone tools
documented that hominins were present on Luzon since more than 700,000 years
ago (Ingicco et al. 2018, Hawks 2018). That would predate the supposed origin
of Homo sapiens and thus suggests an origin from a more
archaic hominin form. This is also indicated by the anatomical character
analysis of the Homo luzonensis fossils, which revealed
similarities of several tooth characters and the curved shape of the toe with
the ape-like genus Australopithecus rather than the human
genus Homo (Stoddart 2019). Such curved toes are typical
for those early australopithecines that were still adapted for climbing in
trees rather than elegant bipedal walking.
The actual evidence for the
establishment of a new human species may seem a bit thin. However, the strange
combination of characters indeed suggests a new species, even though other
researchers such as Dr. Bernard Wood are still skeptical. They emphasize that
“it’s really at the lower end of the amount of evidence that you would want to
base a new species” (Zimmer 2019). Nevertheless, distinguished
paleoanthropologist John Hawks, who was one of the team of scientists that
described Homo naledi, agrees that “No other known species
shares the whole set of features found at Callao” (Hawks 2019c) and “Together, they represent a
mash of features that are confusingly reminiscent of a huge range of other
hominins, and together make for something new and hard to classify” (Hawks 2019b). In any case the discovery shows
that the fossil history of humans was much more diverse and complex than
previously believed. Paleoanthropologist Yousuke Kaifu from the National Museum
in Tokyo is quoted in a National Geographic article (Greshko & Wei-Haas 2019) as saying that
this new hominin “further highlights remarkable diversity of archaic
(primitive) hominins once present in Asia, in a way beyond my expectation.”
A Mosaic Pattern
The mosaic pattern of primitive
and derived characters in Homo luzonensis also shakes up the
phylogenetic tree (Hawks 2019b). Actually, there is no
well-established tree of fossil humans, as is nicely documented by the fact
that John Hawks put question marks at almost every node in his most recent tree
(Hawks 2019a). This embarrassing fact is mostly
based on the problem that fossil humans show all kinds of strange combinations
of characters that do not align well with a nested hierarchy. Even worse,
they do not allow us to order human fossils in a gradually progressive and
smooth transitional lineage from ape-like forms to modern humans. They also do
not fall into a temporal cline from older primitive to younger derived forms.
Some early australopithecines not only exhibit the expected ape-like features
but also some very modern human characters, while some late representatives
of Homo (e.g., Homo naledi) still have very
primitive characters. Thus fossil humans do not form a transitional
series like the famous horse series. They are a frustrating mess for
evolutionists, and the new species from Luzon makes the situation even worse.
So what did scientists say about
the potential affinities of Homo luzonensis? The authors of the
original description refrain from saying anything about its relationships.
Hawks (2019b) speculated about whether the SE Asian island hominins might be
related to the elusive Denisovans. But in my view two arguments point against
such an affinity: phylogenomic studies have shown that Denisovans are
relatively modern members of the genus Homo, closely related to
Neanderthal man, while the anatomical data suggest that the island hominins
belonged to a much more primitive habiline grade (see below); furthermore, the
small body size of the Flores and Luzon populations may suggest an already
dwarf-sized ancestor, while the few Denisovan fossil remains (including the
recently discovered first skull fragment, Jones 2019) document a large body size. Both
arguments also point against an affinity with Homo erectus.
The Hobbit Man
The new discovery of course reminds
one of another East Asian island hominin, the famous hobbit man, Homo
floresiensis, discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores in
2003. Homo luzonensis not only shares with Homo
floresiensis the estimated tiny height of less than 4 feet (1.2 meters),
but also the strange (but different) mixture of primitive and derived traits,
which may suggest a common origin from an early australopithecine-like form
similar to the controversial wastebasket taxon “Homo” habilisthat
may rather represent an australopithecine according to many critical
paleoanthropologists. It is interesting that the most recent phylogenetic
analysis (Argue et al. 2017) of Homo floresiensis revealed
that it is not a dwarf descendent of Homo erectus, as had become
the majority view, but a descendent of an archaic African hominin close
to Homo habilis. It should neither exist at that remote place
outside of Africa nor at that late time more than 1.75 million years after the
supposed extinction of such forms (Australian National University 2017).
Likewise, Homo luzonensis was found at the wrong place and at
the wrong time. Such a primitive hominin should not have been living on the
Philippines at all, and certainly not just 50,000 years ago as a contemporary
of modern humans. So much for the popular evolutionist myth that there are no
out-of-place fossils thwarting Darwinian expectations.
Another obvious problem that
bothers scientists is: How did this primitive man get there at all? Some have suggested that archaic
hominins reached SE Asian islands like Flores, Luzon, and Sulawesi (Talepu site
stone tools from 118,000 years ago, van
den Bergh et al. 2016, Greshko 2016), as well as the Mediterranean
island of Crete (Associated Press 2011, Davis 2018), accidently with driftwood during
storms or tsunami events, while others say that these extinct humans were
smarter than we thought and could deliberately build ocean-going rafts. Hawks (2018, 2019b, 2019c) agrees and remarks that this would
better explain three independent colonizations of East Asian islands that could
not all have been reached by land bridges. However, the earliest archaeological
evidence for boat building (the famous Pesse canoe from the Netherlands) is
only from the Mesolithic period, less than 10,000 years ago.
Last but not least, I would like
to disagree with a critique of the new discovery that is, in my humble opinion,
not warranted. Blogger and writer Dr. J.R. Miller is cited at Uncommon
Descent (Anonymous 2019) with the claim that the Wall
Street Journal article (Hotz 2019) strips its headline (“Fossil
Evidence of New Human Species Found in Philippines”) of any meaning. He lists
four quotes from the article to support his claim:
- “Small-jawed
with dainty teeth, able to walk upright but with feet still shaped to
climb, these island creatures were a mix-and-match patchwork of primitive
and advanced features in a unique variation of the human form, …”
- “So far,
the scientists haven’t found evidence that these creatures used tools to
hunt or to process their food…”
- “The
scientists also have been unable to isolate DNA from the bones and teeth
that could be used to understand how closely they were related to other
human species.”
- “The
scientists also don’t know how these creatures reached the island.”
However, the first point actually
confirms the status as a new species, and the other three points are mostly
irrelevant to the claim in the Journal’s headline and the title of
the scientific paper. I mention this because I think that skeptics of Darwinism
should be careful not to cavil about new evolutionary studies, but should
rather strive to accurately point out real scientific flaws and limits, and
most of all show how an inference to the best explanation of all the scientific
evidence indeed points against Darwinism.
Not Junk Science
This new discovery is highly
interesting and by no means junk science. It confirms that the fossil evidence
supports neither an unambiguous phylogenetic tree of fossil humans nor a smooth
directional evolutionary trajectory from ape-like to human-like forms.
Furthermore, the fossils occur at the wrong place and the wrong time.
Therefore, we see three core predictions of neo-Darwinian evolutionary theory
again refuted by empirical data. That’s how good science is
supposed to work according to the late great philosopher of science Sir Karl
Popper (1963): Conjectures and Refutations! If a theory
and its proponents stubbornly refuse falsification by an ever increasing body
of substantial conflicting evidence, the theory degenerates into a textbook
example of dogmatic pseudo-science. The neo-Darwinian theory of macroevolution
has failed on all fronts, from mathematical feasibility, to theoretical
plausibility and explanatory power, to empirical support.
References:
- Anonymous
2019. Shakeup! New Human Find From Over 50,000 Years Ago Shows Our
Ancestors Were Smarter Than Once Thought. Uncommon Descent April 11, 2019.
- Associated
Press 2011. Cretan tools point to 130,000-year-old sea travel. NBC
News Jan. 3, 2011.
- Argue D,
Groves CP, Lee MSY, Jungers WL 2017. The affinities of Homo floresiensis based
on phylogenetic analyses of cranial, dental, and postcranial
characters. Journal of Human Evolution 107:
107-33.
- Australian
National University 2017. Origins of Indonesian Hobbits finally
revealed. Science Daily, April 21, 2017.
- Bechly G
2018. Rewriting Human Origins, Ongoing in East Asia. Evolution
News, Nov. 28, 2018.
- Bechly G
2019. Günter Bechly: Human Evolution’s Once “Indisputable Facts” Now “Dead
Theory.” ID the Future, March 20, 2019.
- Davis N
2018. Homo erectus may have been a sailor —and able to speak. The
Guardian, Feb. 20, 2018.
- Détroit F,
Mijares AS, Corny J, Daver G, Zanolli C, Dizon E, Robles E, Grün R, Piper
PJ 2019. A new species of Homo from the Late Pleistocene of
the Philippines. Nature 568, 181-186.
- Greshko M
2016. Stone Tools Point to Mysterious Neighbor of Flores “Hobbit”. National
Geographic, Jan. 13, 2016.
- Greshko M,
Wei-Haas M 2019. New species of ancient human discovered in the
Philippines. National Geographic, April 10, 2019.
- Hawks J
2018. Looking at Luzon hominins, from the perspective of 1985. John
Hawks Weblog, May 3, 2018.
- Hawks J
2019a. Three big insights into our African origins. Medium Jan. 4, 2019.
- Hawks J
2019b. New Hominin Shakes the Family Tree — Again. Sapiens, April 10, 2019.
- Hawks J
2019c. New species of hominin from Luzon. John Hawks Weblog, April 10, 2019.
- Hotz RL
2019. Fossil Evidence of New Human Species Found in Philippines. Wall
Street Journal, April 10, 2019.
- Ingicco T
et al 2018. Earliest known hominin activity in the Philippines by 709
thousand years ago. Nature 557, 233-237.
- Jones N
2019. First Confirmed Denisovan Skull Piece Found. Sapiens, March 1, 2019.
- Joyce C
2019. Ancient Bones And Teeth Found In A Philippine Cave May Rewrite Human
History. NPR, April 10, 2019.
- Klinghoffer
D 2019. Bechly: Lessons from the Ongoing “Rewrite” of Human Origins. Evolution
News,March 21, 2019.
- Mijares AS
et al. 2010. New evidence for a 67,000-year-old human presence at
Callao Cave, Luzon, Philippines. Journal of Human
Evolution 59(1), 123-132.
- Stoddart C
2019. These bones belong to a new species of human. Nature Video, April 10, 2019.
- Van den
Bergh G et al. 2016. Stone Tools Point to Mysterious Neighbor of Flores ‘Hobbit’. Nature 529,
208-211.
- Zimmer K.
New Species of Human, Homo luzonensis, Identified in the
Philippines. The Scientist, Apr. 10, 2019.
Photo:
Callao Cave, by Ervin Malicdem [CC
BY-SA 4.0], via Wikimedia Commons.
Share