Regional continuity in Australasian Pleistocene hominid evolution

A reconstruction of the Indonesian male Homo erectus specimen Sangiran 17 reveals a suite of features that suggests regional morphological continuity in Australasia during the middle and late Pleistocene. Characteristics reflecting a morphological clade are established through a comparison with the...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of physical anthropology 1981-07, Vol.55 (3), p.337-349
Hauptverfasser: Thorne, Alan G., Wolpoff, Milford H.
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container_title American journal of physical anthropology
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creator Thorne, Alan G.
Wolpoff, Milford H.
description A reconstruction of the Indonesian male Homo erectus specimen Sangiran 17 reveals a suite of features that suggests regional morphological continuity in Australasia during the middle and late Pleistocene. Characteristics reflecting a morphological clade are established through a comparison with the males from Kow Swamp, the late Pleistocene Australian site with the largest number of hominid specimens. It is argued that the “center and edge” hypothesis could account for the initial appearance of regional variation, and that a dynamic model of geneflow and opposing selection provides the mechanism that maintained a long‐standing dynamic clinal equilibrium in this area.
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source Wiley-Blackwell Journals; MEDLINE; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Animals
Australasia
Australia
Biological Evolution
Clade
Female
Fossils
Gene Frequency
Genetic Variation
Genetics, Population
Haplorhini - anatomy & histology
History of medicine
History, Ancient
Hominid evolution
Homo erectus
Humans
Indonesia
Kow swamp
Male
Paleontology
Sangiran 17
Skull - anatomy & histology
title Regional continuity in Australasian Pleistocene hominid evolution
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