Authors
Sponheimer M. de Ruiter D. Lee-Thorp J. Spath A.
Title
Sr/Ca and early hommin diets revisited: new data from modern and fossil
tooth enamel
Source
Journal of Human Evolution. 48(2):147-156, 2005 Feb.
Author Keywords
Sr/ca. Hominin. Paleodiet. Paleoecology. Enamel.
KeyWords Plus
Calcium ratios sr/ca. Australopithecus-africanus. Physiological
variability. Pleistocene hominids. Terrestrial foodwebs. Dental
evidence. Lazaret cave. South-africa. Strontium. Swartkrans.
Abstract
A previous study of strontium/calcium (Sr/Ca) ratios in Paranthropus
suggested that it consumed more animal foods than was previously believed.
However, that study looked at Sr/Ca in fossil bone, which is known to be
highly susceptible to diagenesis. Enamel, in contrast, is resistant to
post-mortem alteration making it a more appropriate material for Sr/Ca
analysis of Plio-Pleistocene fossils. Yet, we know virtually nothing about
Sr/Ca in the enamel of modern African mammals, much less fossil taxa. To
address this gap, we studied Sr/Ca in tooth enamel from modern mammals in
the greater Kruger National Park, South Africa, as well as fossil fauna
from the Sterkfontein Valley. Grazing herbivores have the highest Sr/Ca,
followed by browsers and carnivores in both modern and fossil fauna. This
similarity in ecological Sr/Ca patterning between modern and fossil fauna
shows that diagenesis has not obscured the primary dietary signals.
Australopithecus has significantly higher Sr/Ca than Paranthropus, and.
higher Sr/Ca than fossil papionins, browsers, and carnivores. Paranthropus
has lower Sr/Ca than grazers, but its Sr/Ca is higher or equal to that of
fossil papionins, browsers, and carnivores. Thus, Sr/Ca for both hominins
is relatively high, and provides no direct evidence for omnivory in either
taxon. The consumption of underground resources or insects are among the
possible explanations for the highly elevated Sr/Ca in Australopithecus.
(c) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. [References: 53]
Institution
Reprint available from:
Sponheimer M
Univ Colorado, Dept Anthropol
Boulder, CO 80309
USA
Authors
Peters CR. Vogel JC.
Title
Africa's wild C-4 plant foods and possible early hominid diets
Source
Journal of Human Evolution. 48(3):219-236, 2005 Mar.
Author Keywords
Carbon isotopes. Paleodiet. C-4 forbs. C-4 sedges. C-4 grasses. Cam
plants. Ecology. Papyrus. Paleoanthropology.
KeyWords Plus
Dioxide compensation points. Calcium ratios sr/ca.
Australopithecus-robustus. South-africa. Geographical-distribution.
Serengeti ecosystem. Isotopic evidence. Swartkrans. Photosynthesis.
Sterkfontein.
Abstract
A small minority of Africa's wild plant foods are C-4. These are primarily
the seeds of some of the C-4 grasses, the rootstocks and stem/leaf bases
of some of the C-4 sedges (especially papyrus), and the leaves of some of
the C-4 herbaceous dicots (forbs). These wild food plants are commonly
found in disturbed ground and wetlands (particularly the grasses and
sedges). Multiple lines of evidence indicate that C-4 grasses were present
in Africa by at least the late Miocene. It is a reasonable hypothesis that
the prehistory of the C-4 sedges parallels that of the C-4 grasses, but
the C-4 forbs may not have become common until the late Pleistocene. CAM
plants may have a more ancient history, but offer few opportunities for an
additional C-4-like dietary signal. The environmental reconstructions
available for the early South African hominid sites do not indicate the
presence of large wetlands, and therefore probably the absence of a strong
potential for a C-4 plant food diet. However, carbon isotope analyses of
tooth enamel from three species of early South African hominids have shown
that there was a significant but not dominant contribution of C-4 biomass
in their diets. Since it appears unlikely that this C-4 component could
have come predominantly from C-4 plant foods, a broad range of potential
animal contributors is briefly considered, namely invertebrates, reptiles,
birds, and small mammals. It is concluded that the similar average C-4
dietary intake seen in the three South African hominid species could have
been acquired by differing contributions from the various sources, without
the need to assume scavenging or hunting of medium to large grazing
ungulates. Effectively similar dominantly dryland paleo-environments may
also be part of the explanation. Theoretically, elsewhere in southern and
eastern Africa, large wetlands would have offered early hominids greater
opportunities for a C-4 plant diet. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights
reserved. [References: 84]
Institution
Reprint available from:
Vogel JC
477 Kay Ave
ZA-0081 Pretoria
South Africa
Univ Georgia, Dept Anthropol
Athens, GA 30602
USA
Authors
Sponheimer M. Lee-Thorp J. de Ruiter D. Codron D. Codron J. Baugh AT.
Thackeray F.
Title
Hominins, sedges, and termites: new carbon isotope data from the
Sterkfontein valley and Kruger National Park
Source
Journal of Human Evolution. 48(3):301-312, 2005 Mar.
Author Keywords
Hominins. Paleodiet. Carbon isotopes. Sedges. Termites. Kruger
national park.
KeyWords Plus
South-africa. Australopithecus-africanus. Dietary differences. Enamel
carbonate. Dental evidence. Early homo. Ratios. Swartkrans.
Evolution. Food.
Abstract
Stable carbon isotope analyses have shown that South African australopiths
did not have exclusively frugivorous diets, but also consumed significant
quantities of C-4 foods such as grasses, sedges, or animals that ate these
foods. Yet, these studies have had significant limitations. For example,
hominin sample sizes were relatively small, leading some to question the
veracity of the claim for australopith C-4 consumption. In addition, it
has been difficult to determine which C-4 resources were actually
utilized, which is at least partially due to a lack of stable isotope data
on some purported australopith foods. Here we begin to address these
lacunae by presenting carbon isotope data for 14 new hominin specimens, as
well as for two potential C-4 foods (termites and sedges). The new data
confirm that non-C-3 foods were heavily utilized by australopiths, making
up about 40% and 35% of Australopithecus and Paranthropus diets
respectively. Most termites in the savanna-woodland biome of the Kruger
National Park, South Africa, have intermediate carbon isotope compositions
indicating mixed C-3/C-4 diets. Only 28% of the sedges in Kruger were C-4,
and few if any had well-developed rhizomes and tubers that make some
sedges attractive foods. We conclude that although termites and sedges
might have contributed to the C-4 signal in South African australopiths,
other C-4 foods were also important. Lastly, we suggest that the
consumption of C-4 foods is a fundamental hominin trait that, along with
bipedalism, allowed australopiths to pioneer increasingly open and
seasonal environments. (c) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
[References: 62]
Institution
Reprint available from:
Sponheimer M
Univ Colorado, Dept Anthropol
Boulder, CO 80309
USA
Authors
Liu W. Zheng L.
Title
Tooth wear difference between the Yuanmou hominoid and Lufengpithecus
Source
International Journal of Primatology. 26(2):491-506, 2005 Apr.
Author Keywords
Yuanmou hominoid. Lufengpithecus. Tooth wear.
KeyWords Plus
Enamel thickness. Diet. Australopithecus. Evolution. China.
Abstract
The Late Miocene hominoids recovered from Lufeng (Lufengpithecus) and
Yuanmou of Yunnan Province, China, are among the most numerous hominoid
fossils in Eurasia. They have yielded critical evidence for the
evolutionary history, biogeography and paleobiology of Miocene hominoids.
We examined and compared the wear pattern and differences of 804 molars of
the Yuanmou hominoid and Lufengpithecus. Our results indicate that both
the upper and lower molars of the Yuanmou hominoids were more heavily worn
than those of Lufengpithecus. The wear patterns of the individual molars
between the Yuanmou hominoid and Lufengpithecus also are different. The
heaviest wear of lower molars of the Yuanmou hominoid occur in M-2,
followed by M-1 and M-3. In Lufengpithecus, M-1 and M-3 were more heavily
worn than M-2. There are differences in wear between the upper and lower
molars for the two hominoids. Among the various factors related to tooth
wear, we suggest that the main reason for the tooth wear differences
between the Yuanmou hominoid and Lufengpithecus may be that they had
different diets. More soft dietary items like leaves and berries were
probably consumed by Lufengpithecus, and the Yuanmou hominoid may mainly
have feed on harder or frugivorous diets. This result complements findings
from previous studies of tooth size proportion, and the development of
lower molar shearing crests in the 2 samples. Enamel thickness, living
environment, behavior patterns, and population structure also might
account for dental wear differences between the Yuanmou hominoid and
Lufengpithecus. [References: 26]
Institution
Reprint available from:
Liu W
Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Vertebrate Paleontol & Paleoanthropol
POB 643
Beijing 100044
Peoples R China
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