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Science

Hobbits' Brains Shrank Due To Remote Home 190

Hugh Pickens writes "The 'hobbits,' dubbed homo floresiensis, caused a worldwide sensation when they were discovered five years ago, when some scientists claimed that the 18,000-year-old human-like fossils found on the Indonesian island of Flores represented an entirely new species. Now researchers at the Natural History Museum in London believe that the creatures' small brains could have developed to reduce the creatures' energy needs, crucial for surviving in an isolated area with limited resources. 'It could be that H. floresiensis' skull is that of a Homo erectus that has become dwarfed from living on an island, rather than being an abnormal individual or separately-evolved species, as has been suggested,' says palaeontologist Eleanor Weston. 'Looking at pygmy hippos in Madagascar, which possess exceptionally small brains for their size, suggests that the same could be true for H. floresiensis, and the result of being isolated on the island.' Although the phenomenon of dwarfism on islands is well recognized in large mammals, an accompanying reduction in brain size has never been clearly demonstrated before."
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Hobbits' Brains Shrank Due To Remote Home

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 07, 2009 @11:35AM (#27860907)

    Does that explain Sarah Palin?

  • by DrugCheese ( 266151 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @11:38AM (#27860971)

    over consumption of ale and pipeweed?

  • by WillKemp ( 1338605 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @11:38AM (#27860973) Homepage

    [......] small brains [......] from living on an island [.......]

    Rather like the British then?

    • by Sleepy ( 4551 )

      Culturally and genetically, Britain is an mix of French, Dutch, Nordic, Celt... and Pastun.

      In the context of extreme genetic isolation, perhaps better examples would be the Royal Family... or the Welsh.

    • by Nutria ( 679911 )

      Rather like the British then?

      Or Hawaiians or Japanese. (Oh, wait, Japanese were on the small side until the US came in after WW2.)

      Seriously, though: maybe if H. Erectus had developed fire, axes, knives and archery, and "humaniformed" the land with huts and agriculture, then they would have been able to produce enough energy to "stay large".

      Anyway, humans have only been on Britain 5,000 years, and modern Brits have a lot of Angle, Saxon, Norman and Viking, which is only 1,500 years old, none of which is lon

      • I believe it's closer to 15,000 years than 5,000.

        And the British were quite short until relatively recently (of course everyone else in the world may have been too, for all i know).

        • by Nutria ( 679911 )

          And the British were quite short until relatively recently (of course everyone else in the world may have been too, for all i know).

          Antebellum furniture was quite small, compared to modern furniture.

          Maybe "we" started to grow when refrigeration and wealth allowed us to eat more meat?

          • Antibiotics in milk and growth hormones in meat may have had something to do with it, too.

            And of course, British people have grown phenomenally since the channel tunnel was built - maybe something to do with not really being an island any more?!

  • 18,000 - amazing (Score:5, Informative)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @11:40AM (#27861005) Journal

    that the 18,000-year-old human-like fossils found on the Indonesian island ... "It could be that H. floresiensis' skull is that of a Homo erectus that has become dwarfed from living on an island...

    An 18,000 year old specimen of Homo Erectus would indeed be an amazing find if true. They were thought to have died out a little less than a million years ago. Thus, 18k is a huge leap. Also, being 18k old may mean that we can extract DNA from it or another like find, and learn more about Erectus, and maybe someday even recreate one ("Erectus Park"). Homo Erectus was a very successful species of proto-human (relatively speaking) and probably the first proto-human to spread deep into Europe and Asia.
       

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 07, 2009 @11:49AM (#27861155)

      I'm not sure that inviting the public to come see Homos in 'Erectus Park' would get you the visitors you are looking for. ..

      • No, but IT departments everywhere will be clamoring to hire the new race of dim-witted cavemen who will apparently, literally, work for less peanuts.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Kozz ( 7764 )

      An 18,000 year old specimen of Homo Erectus would indeed be an amazing find if true.

      That seems like kind of a leap of interpretation. Dr. Weston's statement acknowledges that the "hobbit" is H. floresiensis, so when she says "could be that of H. erectus" (considering the 18,000year date) I think we're talking about the former being a descendant of the latter, not a sub-species.

    • Re:18,000 - amazing (Score:4, Informative)

      by Randle_Revar ( 229304 ) <kelly.clowers@gmail.com> on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:26PM (#27861813) Homepage Journal

      Why are you so surprised? They have been speculating that H. floresiensis might be a dwarfed H. erectus almost since they found it. And it was clear even in the initial description that it was very recent.

      Anyway, even if you could clone H. floresiensis, you would get, well, H. floresiensis, not H. erectus.

  • All the people cast away on desert islands always seem to be pretty stupid. Perhaps they're onto something.

    Incidentally, I agree with BadAnalogyGuy up there; with no competition and limited resources you would expect expensive brains to be evolved out. Cats, for instance, conserve resources in part compared to dogs because they have brains with some of the "higher level" functions reduced. However, I didn't mod him up because I strongly object to the term "retards". It's unpleasant, and insulting to people

    • by hoooocheymomma ( 1020927 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:54PM (#27862391)

      I strongly object to the term "retards".

      By treating the term retard as offensive, you are only feeding into its offensiveness. Retard means slow. If retard has any negative connotation at all, it is because being mentally slow is something that is inherently undesirable, and no matter what window dressing you do to it, the window dressing will always become an insult.

      If you had any depth to you, you would be more focused on trying to emphasize to as many people as possible that being a retard is not something worthy of being hated or abused. The word retard is not harmful at all, and it never will be. It is how people react to people who are retarded. When you focus on something as shallow as a word, you are hurting retards worldwide by misdirecting public attention from their cause.

      The 'Hobbits' are retards. And so are you for getting butthurt over the word retard.

    • However, I didn't mod him up because I strongly object to the term "retards". It's unpleasant, and insulting to people with lower IQs or learning difficulties.

      Right. Like they're totally going to notice.

  • The cave lady probably spent too much time on Slashdot Stone Edition. Damage was irreversible.
  • by Roadkills-R-Us ( 122219 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:02PM (#27861401) Homepage

    How does "some researchers believe" equate to "clearly demonstrated"? I think whoever wrote that blurb has experienced brain shrinkage!

    • I think those researchers must have read Galapagos [wikipedia.org].

      I think it's unlikely that the trait that allowed us to survive so many other environments would be selected against in a challenging environment.

  • not a new species? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by BigHungryJoe ( 737554 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:17PM (#27861665) Homepage

    ""It could be that H. floresiensis' skull is that of a Homo erectus that has become dwarfed from living on an island, rather than being an abnormal individual or separately-evolved species, as has been suggested," says palaeontologist Dr Eleanor Weston.

    Could someone explain why this wouldn't be a new species, even if it is an adapted homo erectus? isn't that how new species are formed? where is the "species" line drawn?

    • by Randle_Revar ( 229304 ) <kelly.clowers@gmail.com> on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:42PM (#27862171) Homepage Journal

      >where is the "species" line drawn?

      theoretically, when populations no longer interbreed. Note that the populations may still be fertile together, as long as they don't naturally and normally interbreed. They may be too far apart, or they may have very different mate attraction strategies that are not interesting to the other group.

      This definition, like many in biology, is in practice rather blurry, especially in plants and extinct organisms.

      In this case, I agree that saying an island dwarfed type of H. erectus *is* H. erectus seems silly, but then I am not a biologist.

      • by TheLink ( 130905 )
        > They may be too far apart, or they may have very different mate attraction strategies that are not interesting to the other group.

        That definition might make Slashdotters a different species.
    • "where is the "species" line drawn?"

      Where convenient. See evolution.

  • while they aren't hobbits, they are similarly ancient, diminuitive peoples of southeast asia whose history may be instructive of how succeeding waves of human and proto-humans competed with and replaced each other. based on the experience of the aeta, i wouldn't be surprised if the last flores hobbit died at the sharp end of a homo sapien's stick

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negrito [wikipedia.org]

    The term Negrito refers to several ethnic groups in isolated parts of Southeast Asia.[1] Their current populations include the Aeta, Agta, Ayta, Ati, Dumagat and at least 25 other tribes of the Philippines, the Semang of the Malay peninsula, the Mani of Thailand and 12 Andamanese tribes of the Andaman Islands of the Indian Ocean.

    Negritos share some common physical features with African pygmy populations, including short stature, natural afro-hair texture, and dark skin; however, their origin and the route of their migration to Asia is still a matter of great speculation. They are genetically distant from Africans at most loci studied thus far (except for MCR1, which codes for dark skin). They have also been shown to have separated early from Asians, suggesting that they are either surviving descendants of settlers from an early migration out of Africa, or that they are descendants of one of the founder populations of modern humans.[2]

    essentially, ancient remnant isolated melanesian populations in largely malay and thai areas across indonesia, malaysia, the philippines, and thailand. the malays took over the coastal areas over time, and now the aeta live in tiny mountain tribes. they also existed in china until recently. han and malay peoples just either outright exterminated them, outcompeted them, or genetically intermarried and swamped them out of existence

    http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/the-black-african-foundation-of-china-honouring-the-aboriginal-black-people-of-china/ [africaresource.com]

    Chinese historians called them "black dwarfs" in the Three Kingdoms period (AD 220 to AD 280) and they were still to be found in China during the Qing dynasty (1644 to 1911). In Taiwan they were called the "Little Black People" and, apart from being diminutive, they were also said to be broad-nosed and dark-skinned with curly hair. After the Little Black People -- and well before waves of Han migrations after 1600 -- came the Aboriginal tribes, who are part of the Austronesian race. They are thought to have come from the Malay Archipelago 6,000 years ago at the earliest and around 1,000 years ago at the latest, though theories on Aborigine migration to Taiwan are still hotly debated. Gradually the Little Black People became scarcer, until a point about 100 years ago, when there was just a small group living near the Saisiyat tribe. The story goes that the Little Black People taught the Saisiyat to farm by providing seeds and they used to party together.

    in the philippines, the aeta famously came to light after the eruption of mount pinatubo, and this isolated group of peoples, probably living on the mountain isolated for hundreds if not thousands of years, were suddenly driven into the modern world

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/11/11/MN206799.DTL [sfgate.com]

    the island of negros in the philippines gets its name from the spanish who found large numbers of aeta who lived there, at one time. now the island is almost completely malay

    the dutch hurried along the process of the supplanting of the aeta with more cooperative malay slaves by genocidally emptying some strategic spice islands because the aetas proved uncooperative in the profitable nutmeg trade:

  • Controversy (Score:2, Informative)

    by a1056 ( 1296899 )
    There were two papers published in Nature on this topic, one of which the article above is based on and the other suggests that this is not enough of an explanation. The-Scientist has a great article summarizing the reports. http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/55677/ [the-scientist.com] (the-scientist) free registration required

    "Both of these papers show things that could not have evolved or been a plastic response within our own species," George Washington University paleoanthropologist Bernard Wood told The Scientist. Wood, who was not involved with either study, added that the papers raise important questions regarding the evolutionary origins of H. floresiensis that only further research can answer.

    While they certainly agree with the diminuative size being related to reduced energy needs they suggest that it is not just a reduced example of homo erectus.

    In the other Nature paper, William Jungers, a paleoanthropologist at Stony Brook University in New York, and his coauthors compared the Hobbit foot to the few existing feet in the fossil record. "You just don't see complete feet until you get into Neanderthal," Jungers told The Scientist. "The fossil record of feet is surprisingly meager." If H. floresiensis was in fact a dwarfed H. erectus, the species would have had to amass primitive features after its ancestor had already evolved more modern skeletal characteristics. "It's asking a lot for evolution to backtrack like that," Jungers said. "Is it possible? I guess, but there's no precedent.".

    Of course all of this analysis is ve

    • DNA mutation rates are not fixed. They need to be calibrated against the fossil record, as well as a bunch of other stuff. DNA evidence is not the magic definite science you seek.

      The problem with bats was the lack of early fossils. Morphological studies with a good fossil record can be pretty reliable. It is not just conjecture--morphological studies include predictions which can be tested.

  • Sure, that explains the small brains... but what explains the pointed ears and large, hairy feet?
    • Tolkien's Hobbits did not have pointed ears.

      • Unless Wikipedia is lying again, in The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, #27, Tolkien describes Hobbits [wikipedia.org] thus:

        I picture a fairly human figure, not a kind of 'fairy' rabbit as some of my British reviewers seem to fancy: fattish in the stomach, shortish in the leg. A round, jovial face; ears only slightly pointed and 'elvish'; hair short and curling (brown). The feet from the ankles down, covered with brown hairy fur. Clothing: green velvet breeches; red or yellow waistcoat; brown or green jacket; gold (or
        • I stand corrected. I believe there is nothing in The Hobbit or LotR about pointed ears, and I was unaware of this letter.

      • by Sloppy ( 14984 )
        But they had wings.
  • ...that the whole "different species" theory was completely debunked. Seems the editors did not notice this. Which is quite a feat, considering that they most likely posted it themselves here on Slashdot. ^^

  • Makes sense (Score:5, Funny)

    by Jessta ( 666101 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:34PM (#27861987) Homepage

    This makes a lot of sense. A large part of what appears to have encouraged the increase in reasoning ability of human beings has been our complex social interaction. On an island with a small population the social interaction would be simpler and thus less reasoning would be required.

    A monkey can make a spear and hunt for food, it takes a human being to figure out that when your girlfriend is telling you about her problems she just wants to complain about it and doesn't actually want you to help create a solution.

  • by scorp1us ( 235526 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @12:46PM (#27862253) Journal

    I took Human Evolution in college. I really liked it. But there is some phallic fascination with brain case size as being a important factor in approximating intelligence.

    We have parrots that are as intelligent as 4-year olds. We have bears that are dumber. We have cephalopods that have a lot of intelligence in a few cm^3. Brain case volume to me, does not seem to have a determining factor in intelligence.

    The density of brain matter would seem to be relevant as we look at brain function in terms of neural complexity. As density increases required volume decreases. And since to soft tissue survive, we have no idea of neural density. It seems that neural density would be a much better proxy for intelligence - particularly when looking in the same genus. (As opposed to cephalopods which have an entirely different brain morphology)

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by z80kid ( 711852 )

      But there is some phallic fascination with brain case size

      Naw. Those researchers are just dickheads.

    • Have you read Dawkin's "The Ancestor's Tale?" There's a tremendous amount of discussion on this issue, and it's one of the most fascinating books I've ever read.

      You're right. The proper measurement is brain mass, not size. Unfortunately it's difficult to measure mass of soft tissue in fossils. Typically, there is a linear relationship between log(body mass) and log(brain mass). Humans and dolphins are the real outliers to the line, with primates outlying to a lesser extent. The animals we think of as

    • I think that brain energy needs in relation to the rest of the body's energy needs should be considered, and this is related to brain case size.

      Humans' gestation, childrearing, nuclear family, tribe-based society, etc. all essentially stem from our huge brains. Our entire society served to support helpless babies- and our babies had to be born so young as to be helpless so that their huge heads didn't kill their mother during childbirth. Even with the early birth, we still require a fontanelle so our head c

    • Have a think about it in terms of vegetarianism
  • Isn't he the lead designer for Duke Nukem Forever?

  • Although the phenomenon of dwarfism on islands is well recognized in large mammals, an accompanying reduction in brain size has never been clearly demonstrated before

    Bullshit. Either they'd be unable to stand up or their poor little necks would snap.

  • The "hobbits" represent a divergence from established models of Human evolutionary history. There are huge egos and invested in keeping things as they are. Conversely, there are careers to be made by getting people to believe something new.

    Because of this, new people are going to overstate the likelihood that these little people represent a missing line, and established people will come up with all kinds of tenuous arguments saying that they are NOT.

    You can't believe either side. Let them duke this out f

  • by jeffsenter ( 95083 ) on Thursday May 07, 2009 @05:24PM (#27867405) Homepage

    The discovery and debate over the "hobbits" Homo floresiensis is fascinating.

    It appears that the hobbits are a unique species and not a shrunken version of Homo erectus based not so much on brain size, but on different and more ape-like body parts including feet, wrists, hips, and shoulders. The NYTimes has a couple [nytimes.com] of stories [nytimes.com] on this.

  • The 'hobbits,' dubbed homo floresiensis

    Argh, that came from TFA (and there's no way to comment on TFA). It should be "The homo floresiensis, dubbed 'hobbits'.."
    From the definition of dubbed:
      b: to call by a distinctive title, epithet, or nickname

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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