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Pssst: Gossip hurts--but friends can protect you from the worst of it

CHICAGO--Think a little gossip is harmless? Beware: new research says gossiping can be a form of warfare in which information is used as a weapon that could potentially damage a competitor's reputation. An effective defense, according to the study released here last week   at the annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists: friends.

Study author Nicole Hess, an evolutionary psychologist at Washington State University in Vancouver, says she instructed 500 subjects to imagine that they were competing for a promotion within a corporation.  She then had them read a list of positive and negative statements, or “gossip,” about their rival for the promotion, and asked them how likely they would be to relay each tidbit to others in the office.

How similar was Neandertal behavior to that of modern humans?

CHICAGO—Neandertals have long been portrayed as dumb brutes. But a growing body of evidence hints that these extinct humans were much savvier than previously thought. The results of a new study presented here last week at the annual meeting of the Paleoanthropology Society bolster that view, and suggest that, in fact, Neandertals acted in much the same way as early modern humans.

To compare the behavior of Neandertals and early moderns, paleoanthropologist Bruce Hardy of Kenyon College studied artifacts from a site in southwestern Germany called Hohle Fels. The site contains several levels of archaeological remains. One of these levels dates to between 36,000 and 40,000 years ago and contains tools manufactured in the Mousterian cultural tradition associated with Neandertals. Another comprises items that are 33,000 to 36,000 years old and are made in the Aurignacian style associated with early modern humans.

Neandertal cannibalism? Maybe not

CHICAGO—Scientists have long argued that Neandertal remains from the site of Krapina in northern Croatia exhibit evidence of cannibalism. The fragmentary nature of the bones, along with cut marks on a number of fragments, were said to be signs that our closest relatives feasted on one another. But a new study suggests that the nicks seem to be the result of much more recent handiwork.

Paleoanthropologist and archaeologist Jörg Orschiedt of the University of Hamburg in Germany reported yesterday at the annual meeting of the Paleoanthropology Society here that cut marks in the Krapina fossils he studied are randomly distributed and did not necessarily occur in spots that would permit de-fleshing (such as where muscles attach to bones). What's more, the scratches varied – some were shallow and others deep.

Hobbit Watch: Did the hobbit have a root canal?

I've recently returned from the annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Columbus, OH., and if there was one word that was on everyone's lips, it was hobbits. OK, maybe not everyone. There were plenty of attendees who study nonhuman primates and human genetics, among other topics, and probably have at most a glancing interest in the tiny remains from Flores, Indonesia, that have been held up as a new species of human, Homo floresiensis. But of the presentations I attended, it was the hobbit-related talks that drew standing-room only crowds

I'm working on a story that will discuss some of the findings presented at the meeting. But in addition to the formal talks there was some interesting hallway scuttlebutt. Hobbit skeptic Maciej Henneberg is proposing that the skeleton known as LB1"”the most complete hobbit by far"”appears on the basis of photographs to have had a filling, possibly a root canal, in its lower left first molar (the M1). If true, this would mean the hobbit is a modern human, not a new species, which is the minority viewpoint that Henneberg and his colleagues have been arguing all along.

Hobbit Watch: Tiny bones from Palau don't detract from hobbit's uniqueness

Who knew that I'd have occasion to write about the hobbits again, so soon after my last post on the subject?

A paper published yesterday in PLoS ONE is fanning the flames of controversy over the wee human remains from Flores, Indonesia. In it paleoanthropologist Lee Berger of the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, and his colleagues report on small human bones from two caves in Palau, Micronesia. The bones date to between 1,400 and 2,900 years ago. See this story from National Geographic (which helped fund the research) for an account of the discovery.

According to the authors, bones from the older levels of the caves are quite small, even when compared to pygmy populations from Southeast Asia. They may therefore be an example of island dwarfing, a known biological phenomenon in which mammals larger than rabbits evolve smaller proportions as an adaptive response to the paucity of resources available on small islands. Furthermore, these early Palauans exhibit a number of traits that are typically associated with earlier members of our genus, including large teeth, a small face and a non-projecting chin. These characteristics also occur in the hobbits from Flores, and have been used to help make the case that the hobbits represent a previously unknown species of human, Homo floresiensis. But Berger and his colleagues contend that these features may simply arise as a side effect of getting small. And that, they say, "would be consistent with the argument that Flores LB1 [the most complete of the Flores individuals] may represent a congenitally abnormal individual drawn from a small-bodied population of H. sapiens."

Hobbit Watch: experts slam the cretin hypothesis

If you've been following paleoanthropology's hobbit saga, you know that scientists have been sparring over the tiny bones ever since their unveiling in 2004. If you don't have any idea of what I'm talking about, here's a brief recap: a team of Australian and Indonesian researchers working at a cave site on the Indonesian island of Flores found the better part of a skeleton of an adult human that stood only a little over a meter tall and had a brain the size of a chimpanzee's. Based on analyses of that specimen and some other, more fragmentary remains, the team concluded that these were the bones of a previously unknown human species, Homo floresiensis, that lived as recently as 12,000 years ago. They suggested that this hominid's diminutive proportions may have evolved in response to the limited resources available on its island home--a phenomenon that has been documented in other island-dwelling mammals. Skeptics, however, have said all along that the remains are hardly those of a new hominid species, but rather a modern human with a genetic growth defect.

Now another group of researchers led by Peter J. Obendorf of RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, is proposing that the hobbits were modern humans that suffered not from a genetic condition, but an environmental disorder known as myxoedematous endemic cretinism. Their report appears in the current issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The team argues that the largely complete skeleton, known as LB1, exhibits a number of distinctive features that are associated with cretinism, including an enlarged cavity for the pituitary gland and primitive wrist morphology. They further note that the environmental factors that lead to this form of cretinism--namely, iodine and selenium deficiencies, and the use of cyanide-producing foods, such as cassava--were potentially present on Flores.

The story doesn't seem to have received much press coverage here in the U.S., but is getting a fair amount of play overseas. Peter Brown of the University of New England in Armidale, Australia, who led the initial description of the little Floresians, has been quoted in a number of publications, including the BBC, as saying:

"The conclusions in this paper are not supported by the facts," he said. "The authors have not examined the original fossil, have little and no experience with fossil hominids and depend upon data obtained by others."

The news stories I've read don't contain much in the way of detail from outside commenters. So I thought I'd ask a few hobbit experts not involved in this particular piece of research what they thought about the new work. Suffice it to say, their responses were pretty damning.

First off, I e-mailed Matt Tocheri of the Smithsonian Institution, who published a paper in the journal Science last year describing LB1's wrist bones. His findings are considered by some researchers to be among the strongest evidence yet that the hobbits were a species distinct from our own. He had this to say about the authors' assertion that the hobbit wrist--in particular, the trapezoid bone--supports the cretinism claim:

"In the paper we published in Science, we provided the descriptive,
developmental, and quantitative details that demonstrate that
pathological disturbances do not turn a human wrist (normal or
pathological) into that of a chimpanzee or gorilla. We also
provided the comparative evidence that demonstrates that early
hominins (including LB1) retain wrist morphology inherited from the
Pan-Homo last common ancestor, whereas Neandertals and modern
humans share derived wrist morphology most likely inherited from
their last common ancestor. The speculation that LB1 has a
bipartite trapezoid is falsified by looking at the figures we
published in Science. A bipartite human trapezoid would have half
of all the trapezoidal articular surfaces missing while the
scaphoid and capitate would show the articular areas of the missing
half; but they do not, and all three bones articulate with one
another fully (just like in an African ape). Moreover, cretin
skeletons may sometimes show a bipartite scaphoid as the new paper
contends (this is because of how the scaphoid tubercle ossifies)
but LB1 does not have a bipartite scaphoid and is otherwise normal
(as are the capitate and trapezoid) but normal for an African ape
or primitive hominin.

60 or so million years of primate evolution provide the world with
a considerably large amount of evidence that the wrist of modern
humans and Neandertals is a recent acquisition in our shared
evolutionary history. Moreover, the evidence indicates this
acquisiton occured after the hobbits split from our hominin family
tree. New hypotheses of hobbit pathology arise every week, and
they will continue to disappear just as quickly afterward. The
phylogenetic evidence of the wrist is just not that easy to explain
away."

I then asked paleoneurologist Dean Falk of Florida State University, who has studied the brain of LB1 (as revealed by a cast of the impresson it left on the braincase), what she thought about the allegation that the pituitary was enlarged. Obendorf et at. estimated on the basis of photographs published in one of Falk's papers that the cavity that housed the pituitary--the so-called pituitary fossa--was abnormally large, a sign of pathology. Falk sent me the following prepared statement:

"The Obendorf et al. paper prompted us to take another swim
through LB1's CT data in the region of the sella turcica, where the pituitary
lives. We had actually done this before when we examined LB1's skull for
pnematization. Earlier, we determined that we could not measure
the pituitary fossa precisely because of damage to the anterior and posterior
borders of the fossa. Now that we've reexamimined the CT images, we can tell
you that there is absolutely no way that the length of the pituitary fossa could be
12.9 mm. We used a measurement of 12.9 mm, which extended far beyond the
existing damaged borders of the fossa. The maximum length the fossa could
have been, in our opinion, is 9 mm - and we emphasize that this is a maximum
estimate. We also measured the 3D-CT reconstruction of LB1's endocast, of
which the authors' only examined a published 2D image of the 3D specimen,
which is a radiological no-no. As with the 3D-CT skeletal measurement of
the fossa, the 3D-CT endocast measurement of the fossa was far less than
12.9 mm."

She added that she and her colleagues "saw nothing in the images to indicate anything abnormal about the relative size of the pituitary gland or its fossa."

Ralph Holloway of Columbia University, another expert on fossil hominid brains who has studied LB1's endocast, had this to say:

"...the pituitary fossa on my endocast is, to my mind, tiny, and I don't get much more than about 6 mm in dimensions, either [anterior-posteriorly] or in breadth, so I don't understand where they have data to make such a claim. Of course, this area on my endocast is not the best preserved, but even still, I cannot see where it was possible that the pituitary fossa showed enlargement. Indeed, as I mentioned in my 2006 presentation at the AAPA meetings, I thought the smallness of the pituitary might have signaled some pathology!"

So there you have it. No love for the cretinism theory so far. I've got a couple more requests for comments out, so if I receive any additional responses, I'll post them here.

Update 03/06/08 6:00 p.m.: Paleoanthropologist David Frayer of the University of Kansas, a proponent of the idea that LB1 was an abnormal modern human, says he thinks that a growth disorder known as Laron syndrome is a better fit with the hobbit's features than cretinism is. (An Israeli team published a paper last year positing that Laron syndrome could explain the hobbit's traits.) But there are other reasons to think LB1 does not represent a new species, he remarks. Frayer also notes that he thinks the oft-repeated claim that 12 individuals are known from the hobbit site is misleading, because most of them are represented by fragmentary bones or teeth that don't reveal much about body size and brain size. LB1 is the only hobbit whose brain size is known.

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Edited by katewong at 03/06/2008 1:19 PM

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Edited by katewong at 03/06/2008 1:21 PM

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Edited by katewong at 03/06/2008 3:02 PM

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Edited by katewong at 03/06/2008 3:04 PM

Absinthe through the ages

A few days ago, the New York Times ran a story about the return of absinthe, the infamous liquor that is said to have caused Van Gogh to hallucinate. Their story referenced an article on the drink from the June 1989 issue of Scientific American. So we dug it up from our archives and are making it available here for your perusal. Cheers!

An interview with Alex, the African grey parrot

As you may have heard, Alex, the celebrated African Grey parrot, died recently. He was 31. Irene Pepperberg of Brandeis University began working with Alex when he was little more than a year old, hoping to gain insights into avian intelligence. Her pioneering research revealed that Alex was no mere mimic: his skills in language and reasoning rivaled those of chimps and dolphins. (Pepperberg wrote an article for Scientific American describing her work with Alex, available here.) In 1996, former Scientific American editor Madhusree Mukerjee paid Alex a visit at Pepperberg's lab, then at the University of Arizona. Her report from that memorable encounter follows below.


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