A Middle Pleistocene Denisovan molar from the Annamite Chain of northern Laos.
Fabrice DemeterClément ZanolliKira E WestawayRenaud Joannes-BoyauPhilippe DuringerMike W MorleyFrido WelkerPatrick Leopold RütherMatthew M SkinnerHugh McCollCharleen GaunitzLasse VinnerTyler E DunnJesper Velgaard OlsenMartin SikoraJean-Luc PoncheEric SuzzoniSébastien FrangeulQuentin BoeschPierre-Olivier AntoineLei PanSong XingJian-Xin ZhaoRichard M BaileySouliphane BoualaphanePhonephanh SichanthongtipDaovee SihanamElise Patole-EdoumbaFrançoise AubaileFrançoise CrozierNicolas BourgonAlexandra ZachwiejaThonglith LuangkhothViengkeo SouksavatdyThongsa SayavongkhamdyEnrico CappelliniAnne-Marie BaconJean-Jacques HublinEske WillerslevLaura ShackelfordPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
The Pleistocene presence of the genus Homo in continental Southeast Asia is primarily evidenced by a sparse stone tool record and rare human remains. Here we report a Middle Pleistocene hominin specimen from Laos, with the discovery of a molar from the Tam Ngu Hao 2 (Cobra Cave) limestone cave in the Annamite Mountains. The age of the fossil-bearing breccia ranges between 164-131 kyr, based on the Bayesian modelling of luminescence dating of the sedimentary matrix from which it was recovered, U-series dating of an overlying flowstone, and U-series-ESR dating of associated faunal teeth. Analyses of the internal structure of the molar in tandem with palaeoproteomic analyses of the enamel indicate that the tooth derives from a young, likely female, Homo individual. The close morphological affinities with the Xiahe specimen from China indicate that they belong to the same taxon and that Tam Ngu Hao 2 most likely represents a Denisovan.