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Discovery of 'Hobbit' Fossils Offers Insight Into Evolution of Diminutive Humanlike Species

This 2015 picture provided by Kinez Riza shows a reconstruction model of Homo Floresiensis, also known as Hobbits, by Atelier Elisabeth Daynes at Sangiran Museum and the Early Man Site.
Kinez Riza via AP Photo
ByCATHERINE THORBECKE
June 08, 2016, 10:11 PM

— -- A fossil find on the Indonesian island of Flores reveals that the ancestors of "hobbits," a now-extinct hominin species exclusive to the island, were present around 700,000 years ago, significantly earlier than originally thought.

The research on ancestors of "hobbits," or Homo floresiensis, the ancient human ancestors who stood about 3 1/2 feet tall, was published today by a team of international scientists in the journal Nature.

This discovery is significant, scientists say, because it reveals more about the evolutionary origin of the species that has been nicknamed hobbits for their diminutive size.

A Hominin fossil from the Meta Mange excavation where an international team of researchers have uncovered the fossilized remains which appear to be the ancestors of Homo floresiensis, also known as Hobbits.
University of Wollongong, Australia via REUTERS

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Since the findings of the original hobbit fossils, around 12 years ago, their evolutionary path has been intensely debated within the scientific community.

A key question is whether these hominins evolved from early Asian Homo erectus and are the case of a unique "evolutionary reversal in hominin body and brain size within an insular environment" or whether the hobbits derived from an older, smaller-brained hominin, such as Homo habilis or even Australopithecus, according to the new paper in Nature.

The findings published today support the view that the hobbits were the dwarfed descendant of early Asian H. erectus and attained their 3-foot statures much earlier than scientists originally believed, researchers said.

PHOTO: This picture provided by Kinez Riza shows teeth which scientists say are about 700,000 years old, either from Homo floresiensis, also known as Hobbits, or a related species.
This picture provided by Kinez Riza shows teeth which scientists say are about 700,000 years old, either from Homo floresiensis or a related species. In a paper released June 8, 2016, researchers say the new fossils have revealed ancestors of Homo floresiensis, also known as ?hobbits.
Kinez Riza via AP Photo

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