University of Wollongong
Browse

Earliest hominin occupation of Sulawesi, Indonesia

Download (3.23 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-18, 18:18 authored by Gerrit van den BerghGerrit van den Bergh, Bo LiBo Li, Adam Brumm, Rainer Grün, Dida Yurnaldi, Mark W Moore, Iwan Kurniawan, Ruly Setiawan, Fachroel Aziz, Richard RobertsRichard Roberts, - Suyono, Michael StoreyMichael Storey, Erick Setiabudi, Michael Morwood
Sulawesi is the largest and oldest island within Wallacea, a vast zone of oceanic islands separating continental Asia from the Pleistocene landmass of Australia and Papua (Sahul). By one million years ago an unknown hominin lineage had colonized Flores immediately to the south1, and by about 50 thousand years ago, modern humans (Homo sapiens) had crossed to Sahul2, 3. On the basis of position, oceanic currents and biogeographical context, Sulawesi probably played a pivotal part in these dispersals4. Uranium-series dating of speleothem deposits associated with rock art in the limestone karst region of Maros in southwest Sulawesi has revealed that humans were living on the island at least 40 thousand years ago (ref. 5). Here we report new excavations at Talepu in the Walanae Basin northeast of Maros, where in situ stone artefacts associated with fossil remains of megafauna (Bubalus sp., Stegodon and Celebochoerus) have been recovered from stratified deposits that accumulated from before 200 thousand years ago until about 100 thousand years ago. Our findings suggest that Sulawesi, like Flores, was host to a long-established population of archaic hominins, the ancestral origins and taxonomic status of which remain elusive.

Funding

Astride the Wallace Line 2: human evolution, dispersal, culture and environmental change in Southeast Asia

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

In search of the first Asian hominins: excavations at Mata Menge, Flores, Indonesia

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

Size matters: elephantoid dispersal, evolution, paleoecology and extinction in Asia

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

Next-generation luminescence dating techniques for Earth and archaeological science applications

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

Out of Asia: unique insights into human evolution and interactions using frontier technologies in archaeological science

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

A world of its own: earliest human occupation of the Maros karsts in Southwest Sulawesi, Indonesia

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Citation

van den Bergh, G. D., Li, B., Brumm, A., Gruen, R., Yurnaldi, D., Moore, M. W., Kurniawan, I., Setiawan, R., Aziz, F., Roberts, R. G., Suyono, , Storey, M., Setiabudi, E. & Morwood, M. J. (2016). Earliest hominin occupation of Sulawesi, Indonesia. Nature, 529 (7585), 208-211.

Journal title

Nature

Volume

529

Issue

7585

Pagination

208-211

Language

English

RIS ID

105134

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC