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Published online 16 April 2008 | Nature | doi:10.1038/452806a

Archaeology: Bones, isles and videotape

Old human remains found on the Pacific islands of Palau are caught in the crossfire between entertainment and science. Rex Dalton reports.

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  • If bones of mixed-species australopithecine/Homo erectus/Homo sapiens populations are not actually present in Mr. Berger's cave, they are likely to be found nearby. Indonesian, Melanesian, and Polynesian oral history is full of realistic, non-mythologized reports of encountering (and often cannibalizing) small hairy people regarded as sub-human. And we know from the Kennewick Man proceedings that native oral history can be used even as scientific court evidence (at least, if it supports what you want it to). Mr. Berger's crime is that he brings up the subject of these populations at all. He's obviously trying to promote the Out of Africa party line and argue against Homo floriensis -- but he does so so awkwardly and unbelievably, with his instant-million-year island regression -- that the entire subject has to be immediately and vigorously tamped down. Just as a hill in Bosnia, in the shape of a pyramid, with human-made rock surfacing, does not exist, could not exist, and Shall Not Be Investigated Further.

    • 17 Apr, 2008
    • Posted by: John x
  • It is most unlikely that the bones on Palau belong to any hominid species other than Homo sapiens -- in fact, Berger does not claim them to be other than H. sapiens. He only claims that there are certain similarities between them and those on Flores, which may illuminate the process of island dwarfism. But as for the so-called ebu gogo or orang pendek, the hairy sub-human folk spoken of by Flores folk and Indonesians, if these have a basis in reality, they are probably orang-utans!

    • 17 Apr, 2008
    • Posted by: Diana Gainer