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Sequence of mammalian fossils, including hominoid teeth, from the Bubing Basin caves, South China

  • Wei Wang
  • , Richard Potts
  • , Yuan Baoyin
  • , Weiwen Huang
  • , Hai Cheng
  • , R. Lawrence Edwards
  • , Peter Ditchfield
  • China University of Geosciences, Wuhan
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • CAS - Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology
  • University of Minnesota Twin Cities
  • University of Oxford

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

117 引用 (Scopus)

摘要

A Plio-Pleistocene to Holocene faunal sequence has been recovered from four carefully excavated caves in the Bubing Basin, adjacent to the larger Bose Basin of South China. The caves vary in elevation; we suggest that the higher caves were formed and filled with sediments prior to the lower caves. The highest deposits, which are from Mohui Cave, contain hominoid teeth and other fossilized remains of mammalian taxa most similar to late Pliocene and early Pleistocene faunas. Wuyun Cave (∼50 m lower in elevation than Mohui) contains a late middle Pleistocene fauna, which is supported by U-series age constraints from 350 to 200 ka. Lower Pubu Cave (∼23 m below Wuyun) is assigned to the late Pleistocene, while the Cunkong Cave (the lowest, ∼2 m lower elevation than Lower Pubu) preserves a Holocene fauna. The four faunal assemblages indicate species-level changes in Ailuropoda, Stegodon, and Sus, the appearance of Elephas, the local disappearance of Stegodon, and the migration of Equus hemionus to South China. These initial results of our work call into question the continued value of the Stegodon/Ailuropoda Fauna, a category long used to characterize the Pleistocene faunas of South China. Excavation of karstic caves of varying elevation within the basins of South China holds promise for defining local sequences of mammalian fossils that can be used to investigate faunal variations related to climate change, biogeographic events, and evolutionary change over the past two million years. Stable isotopic analysis of a small sample of mammalian teeth from Bubing Basin caves is consistent with 100% C3 vegetation in the Bubing/Bose region, with certain δ13C values consistent with a canopied woodland or forest. A preliminary assessment of the hominoid teeth indicates the presence of diverse molar and premolar morphologies including dental remains of Gigantopithecus blacki and a sample with similarities to the teeth reported from Longgupo.

源语言英语
页(从-至)370-379
页数10
期刊Journal of Human Evolution
52
4
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 4月 2007
已对外发布

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此成果有助于实现下列可持续发展目标:

  1. 可持续发展目标 13 - 气候行动
    可持续发展目标 13 气候行动

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