Climate change may have killed ancient ‘hobbit’ hominins

Climate change may have killed ancient ‘hobbit’ hominins
Science

Climate change may have killed ancient ‘hobbit’ hominins

Artist’s impression of a group of Homo floresiensis with a freshly killed stegodon (Stegodon florensis insularis)

MAURICIO ANTON/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Severe drought caused by climate change may have led to the decline of Indonesia’s pygmy elephants and the “hobbit”-like humans who hunted them.

Until about 50,000 years ago, Homo floresiensis, standing about a metre tall, thrived on the South Pacific island of Flores by consuming meat from dwarf pachyderms called stegodons.

Researchers originally thought that the tiny homininswhose bones were discovered

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