2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0121193
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Early Modern Humans and Morphological Variation in Southeast Asia: Fossil Evidence from Tam Pa Ling, Laos

Abstract: Little is known about the timing of modern human emergence and occupation in Eastern Eurasia. However a rapid migration out of Africa into Southeast Asia by at least 60 ka is supported by archaeological, paleogenetic and paleoanthropological data. Recent discoveries in Laos, a modern human cranium (TPL1) from Tam Pa Ling‘s cave, provided the first evidence for the presence of early modern humans in mainland Southeast Asia by 63-46 ka. In the current study, a complete human mandible representing a second indivi… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…BP or shortly thereafter. If correct, these data corroborate the presence of modern humans in Island Southeast Asia during the last 40 millennia, as reported for sites in Laos, Borneo, the Philippines, Sulawesi, Timor, Papua New Guinea and Australia (Fox, 1970;Roberts et al, 1990Roberts et al, , 1994Turney et al, 2001;Dizon et al, 2002;Bowler et al, 2003;D etroit et al, 2004;Storm et al, 2005Storm et al, , 2013Barker et al, 2007;Summerhayes et al, 2010;O'Connor et al, 2011;Barker, 2013;Aubert et al, 2014;Allen and O'Connell, 2014;Clarkson et al, 2015;Demeter et al, 2015;Hiscock, 2015;O'Connell and Allen, 2015;O'Connor, 2015).…”
Section: Combustion Features and Fire-usesupporting
confidence: 77%
“…BP or shortly thereafter. If correct, these data corroborate the presence of modern humans in Island Southeast Asia during the last 40 millennia, as reported for sites in Laos, Borneo, the Philippines, Sulawesi, Timor, Papua New Guinea and Australia (Fox, 1970;Roberts et al, 1990Roberts et al, , 1994Turney et al, 2001;Dizon et al, 2002;Bowler et al, 2003;D etroit et al, 2004;Storm et al, 2005Storm et al, , 2013Barker et al, 2007;Summerhayes et al, 2010;O'Connor et al, 2011;Barker, 2013;Aubert et al, 2014;Allen and O'Connell, 2014;Clarkson et al, 2015;Demeter et al, 2015;Hiscock, 2015;O'Connell and Allen, 2015;O'Connor, 2015).…”
Section: Combustion Features and Fire-usesupporting
confidence: 77%
“…The oldest South Asian fossils found, from the Sri Lankan cave of Fa Hien, date to ∼33‐30 ka. In Southeast Asia, the oldest fossils are from the cave of Tam Pa Ling in Laos and date to ∼ 65‐45 ka . This age admits the possibility that Homo sapiens either left Africa earlier than the Upper Paleolithic model suggests or that dispersal was extremely rapid, as hypothesized by coastal dispersal models (Table ).…”
Section: Fossil Evidencementioning
confidence: 88%
“…Vast areas of Asia have yet to produce any Pleistocene hominin fossils . Sites further east face dating problems and taxonomic ambiguities associated with elements such as teeth and foot bones that are not strongly diagnostic of species . While the relatively well understood Levantine record may provide a null hypothesis for demographic change across a wider area of Southwest Asia, this must be qualified by the atypical ecological features of the Levant as a Mediterranean biome in a region more widely characterized by the particularities of the much larger Saharo‐Arabian biome.…”
Section: Fossil Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several researchers have questioned our findings and argued that these fossils instead show affinities to either the Late Pleistocene Upper Cave remains from Zhoukoudian18 or Late Pleistocene/early Holocene crania from mainland Southeast Asia19. A recently described mandible from Tam Pa Ling (TPL2) in nearby Laos has also been described as exhibiting archaic hominin features20, although, they are far less numerous than those seen in the Maludong or Longlin remains1516. The similarly dated TPL1 cranium is evidently modern in its morphology19.…”
mentioning
confidence: 68%