人类学学报 ›› 2026, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (02): 199-209.doi: 10.16359/j.1000-3193/AAS.2026.0010

• 古猿-古灵长类及其演化 • 上一篇    下一篇

广西崇左岩利1号洞早-中更新世过渡期的巨猿化石

姚艳燕1,2,3(), 艾婉婷1, 胡敏航4, 付琼耀4, 李国山2, 钟洁美1, 胡鹏程3, 黄胜敏2, 田淳1, 梁华4, 廖卫1, 王伟1, 易智星1,2()   

  1. 1.山东大学文化遗产研究院,青岛 266237
    2.南宁师范大学,南宁 530001
    3.广西民族博物馆,南宁 530028
    4.广西自然博物馆,南宁 530012
  • 收稿日期:2025-11-03 修回日期:2026-02-04 出版日期:2026-04-15 发布日期:2026-04-17
  • 通讯作者: 易智星,副研究员,主要从事古人类学研究。E-mail: yizhixing@sdu.edu.cn
  • 作者简介:姚艳燕,副研究馆员,主要研究华南地区洞穴化石埋藏学、第四纪哺乳动物群。E-mail: yaoyanyan@amgx.org
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金(42402008);国家自然科学基金(42202004);国家自然科学基金(42472007);广西自然科学基金(2024GXNSFBA010310);八桂青年拔尖人才培养项目;国家社科基金重大项目(20&ZD246)

Gigantopithecus blacki discovered in the Early-Middle Pleistocene transition phase in Yanli Cave 1, Chongzuo, Guangxi

YAO Yanyan1,2,3(), AI Wanting1, HU Minhang4, FU Qiongyao4, LI Guoshan2, ZHONG Jiemei1, HU Pengcheng3, HUANG Shengmin2, TIAN Chun1, LIANG Hua4, LIAO Wei1, WANG Wei1, YI Zhixing1,2()   

  1. 1. Institute of Cultural Heritage, Shandong University, Qingdao 266237
    2. Nanning Normal University, Nanning 530001
    3. Anthropology Museum of Guangxi, Nanning 530028
    4. Natural History Museum of Guangxi, Nanning 530012
  • Received:2025-11-03 Revised:2026-02-04 Online:2026-04-15 Published:2026-04-17

摘要:

步氏巨猿(Gigantopithecus blacki)被推测为体型最大的灵长类动物,其化石记录主要集中于早更新世,次为中更新世,而在早-中更新世过渡期(1.2~0.7 Ma)的材料相对稀缺,制约了学界对该时期“中更新世革命”气候转型背景下巨猿演化规律的深入探讨。2023年末至2024年初,我们对广西崇左岩利1号洞进行了系统发掘,出土了13枚巨猿牙齿化石。与巨猿化石伴生的哺乳动物群中,既有早更新世晚期代表性物种武陵山大熊猫,又有中更新世典型物种巴氏大熊猫,动物群组合性质指示其生物地层年代处于早-中更新世过渡阶段。与其他化石地点的巨猿牙齿尺寸对比表明,岩利1号洞的部分标本保留早更新世早期尺寸相对较小的特征,但其他标本的尺寸接近早更新世晚期乃至中更新世常见的较大尺寸,这一结果与生物年代学推断相吻合。继广西崇左缺缺洞和展望洞之后,岩利1号洞可能是第三处早-中更新世过渡期巨猿遗址,有望为揭示气候转型背景下巨猿牙齿性状的演化模式与适应策略提供重要材料。

关键词: 步氏巨猿, 早-中更新世, 中国南方, 哺乳动物群

Abstract:

Gigantopithecus blacki is hypothesized to have been the largest primate species. Its fossil record is predominantly concentrated in the Early Pleistocene, followed by the Middle Pleistocene, while materials from the Early-Middle Pleistocene transition (EMPT, 1.2~0.7 Ma) remain relatively scarce, therefore limiting in-depth exploration of the Gigantopithecus evolutionary patterns against the backdrop of climatic shifts during the Middle Pleistocene Revolution. Systematic excavations at Yanli Cave 1 in Chongzuo, Guangxi, conducted between late 2023 and early 2024, yielded 13 dental specimens of G. blacki. The associated mammalian fossil assemblage has been identified as comprising 6 orders, 17 families, 27 genera, and 30 species. The Primates include G. blacki, Pongo weidenreichi, Hylobates sp., Macaca sp., Rhinopithecus sp., and Trachypithecus sp. The Rodentia include Hystrix kiangsenensis. The Carnivora include Cuon javanicus antiquus, Panthera tigris, Neofelis nebulosa, Catopuma temminckii, Viverra sp., Ursus thibetamus, Ailuropoda wulingshanensis, A. melanoleuca baconi, Arctonyx collaris, and Meles leucurus. The Perissodactyla include Rhinoceros sondaicus and Tapirus sinensis. The Artiodactyla consist of Sus peii, S. xiaozhu, Cervus unicolour, Elaphodus cephalophus, Muntiacus muntjak, M. reevesi, Capricornis sumatraensis, Megalovis guangxiensis, and Bos gaurus. The Proboscidea include Stegodon cf. S. orientalis and Elephas maximus. The mammalian assemblage associated with these giant ape fossils includes both late Early Pleistocene representative taxa such as A. wulingshanensis, as well as Middle Pleistocene forms like A. melanoleuca baconi. The faunal assemblage indicates a biostratigraphic age of EMPT. Comparative analysis of tooth dimensions with Gigantopithecus fossils from other localities reveals that some specimens (447, 418, 043, 653, and SG-2) from Yanli Cave 1 retain the relatively small-sized characteristic generally found in the early Early Pleistocene populations. However, other specimens (589, 326, and 715) approach the large dental size commonly found in the late Early Pleistocene populations and larger size ranges documented in the Middle Pleistocene populations. These findings are consistent with the biochronological assessment. Following the discoveries at Queque Cave and Zhanwang Cave (both located at Chongzuo, Guangxi), Yanli Cave 1 represents as a third potential EMPT Gigantopithecus locality, likely offering crucial evidence for understanding dental evolutionary patterns and adaptive strategies in response to EMPT climatic shifts.

Key words: Gigantopithecus blacki, Early-Middle Pleistocene transition, South China, mammal fauna

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