So what is the source of this great acrimony that
seems to exist between the two sides in this debate over the
species-hood of Ebu Gogo? At one level it is theoretical dispute: Alan
Thorne and Maciej Henneberg are
proponents of the "Multi-regional" hypothesis of human evolution
while
Peter Brown and Mike Morwood,
like the majority of scientists, accept the "Out of Africa" hypothesis.
But scientific differences only go so far to explaining the apparent
enmity involved.
Paleoanthropology is a small field and Australian paleoanthropology is even smaller. A quick Google search will tell you that,
Thorne and Brown have been sparring for years, in fact ever since Brown, a former PhD student of Thorne's,
started publicly disputing his findings. Thorne had argued that
Australia may have been settled by two strains of human represented by
different skeleton types: one gracile and modern looking found at Lake
Mungo, the other robust with primitive, almost Homo Erectus-like,
features from Kow Swamp. Thorne's view is that modern Aborigines are
descended from both of these groups, a unique amalgam of modern human
that can only said to have originated from Australia - not Africa.
Brown disagreed,
arguing that there is no evidence to suggest that
there really were two groups. What was "gracile" about the Mungo "man"
was due to it being female not male and what was primitive
about Kow Swamp skeletons was due to a head-deforming practice which
had been applied to the individuals while they were still infants (a
cultural practice still observed in some parts of Australia as late as
the 19th century). Skeletons found in both groups were of human beings
who were modern in every respect, as modern, apparently, as the day
their ancestors set foot outside of Africa.
Years later, Peter Brown analyses a new skeleton found on an Indonesia island and
declares it to be from a hitherto unknown hominid species. Alan Thorne, now
retired from the ANU, takes the extraordinary step of flying to
Jogjakarta to visit Teuku Jacob's lab - in the knowledge that the bones
were under dispute and had been made inaccessible to the researchers who found them - to
confirm his already announced position, that they were those of a human being, modern in every respect
except for a certain deformity. Hmmm.
Fortunately for the rest of us, the Internet has made us all instant
experts on everything. So I guess it's up to us to decide
who's right
and who's wrong. See for yourself: the above illustration comes
from
supplementary material supplied for Dean Falk's paper in Science where she made virtual endocasts of the brain-cases of various skulls and compared them against Homo Floresiensis.
Ebo Gogo's brain-case is in the middle, while a modern human one is
above it and a chimpanzee's is below it. To the left is the brain-case
of an individual suffering microcephaly (not the variety mentioned by
Alan Thorne, by the way) and to the right is one from a Homo Erectus
skull.
UPDATE: a good piece on Prof Teuku Jacob and Alan Thorne's
reprehensible behaviour.