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| Premolar longitudinal enamel and Retzius lines of Pongo from South China. The black dotted line in (b) shows a Retzius line at 50× magnification [Credit HU Rong] |
Thousands of Pongo teeth from more than 30 sites dating from early to late Pleistocene have been found in China. Fifteen Pongo teeth with complete crowns and with little or slight worn edges and crests were selected for this study from the Pleistocene of Guangxi, unearthed by a Guangxi field investigation team of the IVPP during the 1950s–1960s.
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| Retzius lines and cross-striations of Pongo from South China at 200× magnification. The white straight lines are Retzius lines, and the lines of arrows show cross-striations [Credit: HU Rong] |
Researchers found the periodicities for all 15 teeth were 9 d. Periodicity of fossil Pongo from South China was relatively long but fell within the variation of extant Pongo, Gorilla and modern human, and longer than periodicity of Pan and other extant primates. Fossil Pongo from South China was similar to Lufengpithecus and Sivapithecus, shorter than Gigantopithecus and longer than European and African fossil apes and most early hominins in periodicity. Generally, the periodicities of Asian large-body fossil apes were longer than the periodicities of European and African large-body fossil apes in Miocene.
After analyzing difference among species and trend of evolution in periodicity, researchers found that periodicity might gradually increase from Proconsul in early Miocene to several fossil apes in Miocene and then Gigantopithecus in Pleistocene. In addition, correlation between periodicity and body mass respectively in males and females of six extant apes and five fossil apes, indicates that periodicity positively correlated with body mass.
Source: Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology [February 27, 2012]







