A representation of Homo floresiensis at the National Museum of Natural History. Photo: Karen Neoh CC BY 2.0
Anna Goldfield
Zooarchaeologist E. Grace Veatch investigates rat remains near the Liang Bua Cave on the Indonesian island of Flores. Photo: Hanneke Meijer
Flores was once home to Homo floresiensis, a diminutive hominin species affectionately termed the “hobbit,” possibly as early as 700,000 years ago — although most of the finds are between 100,000 and 60,000 years old. H floresiensis shared a common ancestor, likely Homo erectus, with modern humans. But populations of modern humans probably didn’t arrive on Flores before 46,000 years ago, and, according to Veatch, archaeological evidence indicates that by then the H floresiensis population no longer existed on the island.
What happened to the “hobbits”? Did their disappearance have something to do with the prey they hunted? How did modern humans hunt these animal species? Veatch is attempting to answer these questions by looking at the remains of prey species that both “hobbits” and modern humans consumed. She is particularly keen to understand the hunting strategies employed by H. floresiensis. How did hominins who only stood about 3 1/2 feet tall hunt giant rats and flying foxes (a large species of bat)?
at the National Museum of Natural
History. Photo: Karen Neoh CC BY 2.0
Veatch is studying the remains of several species of rat associated with H floresiensis, and in later deposits, with anatomically modern humans at the cave site of Liang Bua on Flores. She has participated in excavations at the site since 2015 and has spent countless hours in the National Research and Development Centre for Archaeology (ARKENAS) in Jakarta, measuring the rat bones that are preserved in the archaeological material from the cave. So far, she has determined that at least five different size classes of rat existed in the area, ranging from small (the size of a city rat) to giant (those terrier-sized specimens)—as evidenced throughout the archaeological sequence.
By looking at the markings and textures, such as gouges or scrapes, on the surfaces of the rat bones, Veatch can tell whether the animal was butchered or whether it passed through the digestive tract of one of the local birds of prey. Most of the small- and medium-sized rats from Liang Bua seem to have been consumed by birds. However, Veatch was surprised to find some unexpected cut marks on one small specimen from the material associated with H floresiensis. This introduced the possibility that the “hobbit” diet included all sizes of rat.
floresiensis, skull from
Liang Bua Cave.
Photo: Kristofer Helgen
On the other hand, when small mammal remains are found in sites associated with other members of the genus Homo, such as Neanderthals or “hobbits,” such evidence tends to be dismissed as showing that these rodents were diverse and plentiful—and therefore were “easy targets.” Those cut marks on the bone from a small-bodied rat, then, offer up the intriguing prospect that H floresiensis occasionally incorporated the smallest rat species into their diet. So what does a diet of small mammals really mean? Did H floresiensis and Homo sapiens hunt these animals differently while living at Liang Bua? Did both populations use snares or traps to hunt? This puzzle is one that Veatch hopes to address with her research.
Answering these questions requires a number of different approaches — and not all of them take place in the lab. To create a collection of comparative examples of bird-digested bones, Veatch collaborated with Zoo Atlanta to feed rats to owl and vulture species similar to those found at Liang Bua and to collect the bones after they had been digested. Bird digestive systems haven’t changed much in the past few millennia, so the marks on the bones digested by the modern birds provide examples of what to look for on the ancient bones. “That’s been a really great resource,” Veatch says.
(above) and Papagomys
armandvillei (below) are type
specimens of two rat species
from Flores. Photo: Eelco
Kruideniers/Wikimedia Commons
Today, the inhabitants of Flores continue to make use of the island’s animal resources. Though the human population on Flores has significantly affected the fauna of the island, decimating many of the species that once lived there, rats and flying foxes still thrive and are prized as local food sources. Modern hunters who regularly kill the same rat and bat species as their very ancient ancestors might offer insights that can shed light on ancient hunting strategies. Veatch will return to Flores to observe modern hunting practices in collaboration with colleagues from ARKENAS, who will accompany and film the hunters. Veatch says she also plans to observe the butchering and cooking of the meat—and hopes to sample the final product.
Before I ended my conversation with Veatch, I asked her what the most important part of her work at Liang Bua was. She said she feels lucky to work with such an extraordinary team of researchers. And then, she added, there’s also that moment.
“One of the greatest feelings for me while doing this work has been the ‘aha’ moment. Every scientist knows the feeling, when you’ve discovered something for the first time,” she said. “While it’ll eventually be shared with the rest of the world, that moment is yours.”
This work first appeared on SAPIENS under a CC BY-ND 4.0 license. Read the original here.
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