Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

India at the cross-roads of human evolution

  • Published:
Journal of Biosciences Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

The Indian palaeoanthropological record, although patchy at the moment, is improving rapidly with every new find. This broad review attempts to provide an account of (a) the Late Miocene fossil apes and their gradual disappearance due to ecological shift from forest dominated to grassland dominated ecosystem around 9-8 Ma ago, (b) the Pliocene immigration/evolution of possible hominids and associated fauna, (c) the Pleistocene record of fossil hominins, associated fauna and artifacts, and (d) the Holocene time of permanent settlements and the genetic data from various human cultural groups within India.

Around 13 Ma ago (late Middle Miocene) Siwalik forests saw the emergence of an orangutan-like primate Sivapithecus. By 8 Ma, this genus disappeared from the Siwalik region as its habitat started shrinking due to increased aridity influenced by global cooling and monsoon intensification. A contemporary and a close relative of Sivapithecus, Gigantopithecus (Indopithecus), the largest ape that ever-lived, made its first appearance at around 9 Ma. Other smaller primates that were pene-contemporaneous with these apes were Pliopithecus (Dendropithecus), Indraloris, Sivaladapis and Palaeotupia. The Late Pliocene and Early Pleistocene witnessed northern hemisphere glaciations, followed by the spread of arid conditions on a global scale, setting the stage for hominids to explore “Savanahastan”. With the prominent expansion of grassland environments from East Africa to China and Indonesia in the Pliocene, monkeys and baboons dispersed into the Indian subcontinent from Africa along with other mammals. Though debated, there are several claims of the presence of early hominins in this part of the world during the Late Pliocene, based primarily on the recovery of Palaeolithic tools. Fossils of our own ancestor and one of the first globe-trotters, early Homo erectus, has been documented from the Early Pleistocene of East Africa, Western Asia and Southeast Asia, thus indirectly pointing towards Indian subcontinent as a possible migration corridor between these regions. The only definite pre-Homo sapiens fossil hominin remains come from the Central Narmada Valley and are thought to be of Middle to late Pleistocene age, and the cranium has been shown to be closely linked to archaic Homo sapiens/H. heidelbergensis of Europe. Around ∼74,000 yrs ago, a super volcanic eruption in Sumatra caused the deposition of Youngest Toba Tephra, that covered large parts of the Indian peninsula. Just around this time anatomically-and-behaviorally modern humans or Homo sapiens possibly arrived into India as evidenced by the so called Middle and Upper Palaeolithic assemblages and associated symbolic evidence. The available genetic data reveals that the gene pool to which modern Indians races belong was extremely diverse and had variable mixed links with both European and Asian populations.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Institutional subscriptions

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Acharyya S K and Basu P K 1993 Toba ash on the Indian subcontinent and its implications for correlation of late Pleistocene alluvium; Quat. Res. 40 10–19

    Google Scholar 

  • Amano K and Taira A 1992 Two-phase uplift of higher Himalayas since 17 Ma; Geology 20 391–394

    Google Scholar 

  • Ambrose S N 1998 Late Pleistocene human population bottlenecks, volcanic winter, and differentiation of modern humans; J. Hum. Evol. 34 623–651

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Andrews P 1982 Hominoid evolution; Nature (London) 295 185–186

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Andrews P and Cronin J 1982 The relationships of Sivapithecus and Ramapithecus and the evolution of the orangutan; Nature (London) 297 541–546

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Andrews P and Walker A 1979 The primate an other fauna from Fort Ternan, Kenya; in Human origins (eds) G Isaac and E McCown (Menlo Park, California: WA Benjamin) pp 279–306

    Google Scholar 

  • Ashton P S and Gunatilleke C V S 1987 New light on the plant geography of Ceylon, Historical plant geography; J. Biogeogr. 14 249–285

    Google Scholar 

  • Athreya S 2007 Was Homo heidelbergensis in South Asia? A test using the Narmada fossil from central India; in The evolution and history of human populations in South Asia (eds) M D Petraglia and B Allchin (New York: Springer Press) pp 137–170

    Google Scholar 

  • Badam G L 2002 Quaternary Vertebrate Paleontology in India: Fifty Years of Research; in Indian archeology in retrospect Archaeology and interactive disciplines Vol. 3 (eds) S Settar and R Korisettar (Delhi: Manohar and Indian Council of Historical Research) pp 209–246

    Google Scholar 

  • Bajpai S, Kay R F, Williams B A, Das D P, Kapur V V and Tiwari B N 2008 The oldest Asian record of Anthropoidea; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 105 11093–11098

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Bamshad M, Kivisild T, Watkins W S, Disxon M E, Ricker C E, Rao B B, Naidu J M, Prasad B V R, Reddy P G, Rasanayagam A, Papiha S S, Villems R, Redd A, Hammer M F, Nguyen S V, Carroll M L, Batzer M A and L B Jorde 2001 Genetic Evidence on the Origins of Indian Caste Populations; Genome Res. 11 994–1004

    CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  • Barry J C, Morgan M E, Flynn L J, Pilbeam D, Behrensmeyer A K, Raza S M, Khan I A, Badgley C, Hicks J and Kelley J 2002 Faunal and environmental change in the latest Miocene Siwaliks of northern Pakistan; Paleobiol. Memoirs 28 1–72

    Google Scholar 

  • Beard K C, Tong Y, Dawson M R, Wang J and Huang X 1996 Earliest complete dentition of an anthropoid primate from the late middle Eocene of Shanxi Province, China; Science 272 82–85

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Belmaker M 2002 First evidence of the presence of Theropithecus sp. in the Southern Levant; Israel J. Zool. 48 165

    Google Scholar 

  • Berggren W A, Kent D V and van Couvering J A 1985 Neogene geochronology and chronostratigraphy; in The chronology of the geological record (ed.) N J Snelling (Oxford: Blackwell Scientific) pp 211–260

    Google Scholar 

  • Begun D R, Güleç E and Geraads D 2003 Dispersal patterns of Eurasian hominoids: Implications from Turkey; in Distribution and migration of tertiary mammals in Eurasia (eds) J W F Reumer and Wessels W Deinsea (Rotterdam: Deisea) vol 10, pp 23–39

    Google Scholar 

  • Burkle L H 1989 Distribution of diatoms in sediments of the northern Indian ocean: Relationship to physical oceanography; Marine Micropaleontol. 15 53–65

    Google Scholar 

  • Bossuyt F and Milinkovich M C 2001 Amphibians as indicators of Early Tertiary “Out-of-India“ dispersal of vertebrates; Science 292 93–95

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Brunet M, Beauvilain A, Coppens Y, Heintz E, Aladji H E Moutaye and David P 1995 The first australopithecine 2,500 kilometres west of the Rift Valley (Chad); Nature (London) 378 273–275

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Cameron D W 2001 The taxonomic status of the Siwalik Late Miocene hominid Gigantopithecus (’Indopithecus’); Himalayan Geol. 22 29–34

    Google Scholar 

  • Cameron D W 2003 A functional and phylogenetic interpretation of the late Miocene Siwalik hominid Indopithecus and the Chinese Pleistocene hominid Gigantopithecus; Himalayan Geol. 24 19–28

    Google Scholar 

  • Cameron D, Patnaik R and Sahni A 2004 The phylogenetic significance of the Middle Pleistocene Narmada Hominin; Int. J. Osteoarchaeol. 14 419–447

    Google Scholar 

  • Cerling T E, Harris J M, MacFadden M G, Leakey M G and Quade J 1997 Global vegetation change through the Miocene/Pliocene boundary; Nature (London) 389 153–158

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Chauhan P R 2006 Human Origins Studies in India: Position, Problems, and Prospects. Assemblage 9. Available at: www.assemblage.group.shef.ac.uk/issue9/chauhan.html

  • Chauhan P R 2007 Soanian cores and core-tools from Toka, northern India: towards a new typo-technological organization; J. Anthropol. Archaeol. 26 412–441

    Google Scholar 

  • Chauhan P R 2008a Large mammal fossil occurrences and associated archaeological evidence in Pleistocene contexts of peninsular India and Sri Lanka; Quat. Int. 192 21–42

    Google Scholar 

  • Chauhan P R 2008b Soanian lithic occurrences and raw material exploitation in the Siwalik Frontal zone, northern India: a geoarchaeological approach; J. Hum. Evol. 54 591–614

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Chauhan P R 2009a The Lower Paleolithic of the Indian Subcontinent; Evol. Anthropol. 18 62–78

    Google Scholar 

  • Chauhan P R 2009b The Indian subcontinent and ‘Out of Africa I’; in Out of Africa I: The first Hominins of Eurasia (eds) J Fleagle, J Shea and R Leakey (Kluwer Academic Press. Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology Series) (in press)

  • Chauhan P R 2009c Core-and-flake assemblages of India; in Asian Paleoanthropology: From Africa to China and beyond (Book Series: Vertebrate paleobiology and paleoanthropology) (eds) C J Norton and D Braun (Kluwer Academic Press) (in press)

  • Chauhan P R 2009d The South Asian Paleolithic record and its potential for transitions studies; in Sourcebook of paleolithic transitions: Methods, theories and interpretations (eds) M Camps and P R Chauhan (Springer Press) pp 121–139

  • Ciochon R L 1985 Fossil ancestors of Burma; Nat. Hist. 94 26–36

    Google Scholar 

  • Ciochon R L and Fleagle J G 1985 Ramapithecus and human origins; in Primate evolution and origins (eds) R L Ciochon and J G Fleagle (Menlo Park, California: W A Benjamin) pp 207–208

    Google Scholar 

  • Ciochon R L, Piperno D R and Thompson R G 1990 Opal phytoliths found on the teeth of the extinct ape Gigantopithecus blacki: implications for paleodietary studies; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87 8120–8124

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Ciochon R L, Long V T, Roy L, Gonzalez L, Grun R, De Vos J, Younge C, Taylor L, Yoshida H and Reagan M 1996 Dated co-occurrence of Homo erectus and Gigantopithecus from Tham Khuyen Cave, Vietnam; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93 3016–3020

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Colbert E H 1940 Pleistocene mammals from the Ma Kai valley of Northern Yunnan, China; Am. Mus. Novitates 1099 1–10

    Google Scholar 

  • Cordaux R, Aunger R, Bentley G, Nasidze I, Sirajuddin S M and M Stoneking 2004 Independent origins of Indian caste and tribal paternal lineages; Curr. Biol. 14 231–235

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Culotta F 1995 Asian anthropoids strike back; Science 270 918

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Delson E 1993 Theropithecus fossils from Africa and India and the taxonomy of the Genus; in Theropithecus: The rise and fall of a primate genus (ed.) N G Jablonski (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) pp 157–189

    Google Scholar 

  • Delson E, Eck G G, Leakey M G and Jablonski N G 1993 A partial catalogue of fossil remains of Theropithecus; in Theropithecus: The rise and fall of a primate genus (ed.) N G Jablonski (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) pp 499–525

    Google Scholar 

  • de Lumley H and Sonakia A 1985 Contexte stratigraphique et archéologique de l’homme de la Narmada, Hathnora, Madhya Pradesh, Inde; L’ Anthropologie 89 3–12

    Google Scholar 

  • Dennell R W 2003 Dispersal and colonisation, long and short chronologies: how continuous is the Early Pleistocene record for hominids outside East Africa?; J. Hum. Evol. 45 421–440

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Dennell R W and Roebroeks 2005 Out of Africa: An Asian perspective on early human dispersal from Africa; Nature (London) 438 1099–1104

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Dennell R W, Rendell H M and Hailwood E 1988 Early tool making in Asia: Two Million year old artifacts in Pakistan; Antiquity 62 98–106

    Google Scholar 

  • De Terra H and Patterson T T 1939 Studies on the ice age in India and associated human culture (Carnegie Instit. Washington Publ.) pp 493

  • Dowsett H, Thompson R, Barron J, Cronin T, Fleming F, Ishman S, Poore R, Willard D and Holtz T J 1994 Joint investigations of the Middle Pliocene climate I: PRISM palaeoenvironmental reconstructions; Global Planetary Change 9 169–195

    Google Scholar 

  • Duncan M T and Horvath S M 1988 Physiological adaptations to thermal stress in tropical Asians; Eur. J. Appl. Physiol. Occupat. Physiol. 57 540–544

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Edwin D, Vishawanathan H, Roy S, Usha Rani, M, Majumder P 2002 Mitochondrial DNA diversity among five tribal populations of southern India; Curr. Sci. 83 158–16

    Google Scholar 

  • Endicott P, Gilbert M T P, Stringer C, Lalueza-Fox C, Willersley E, Hansen A J and A J Cooper 2003 The Genetic Origins of the Andaman Islanders; Am. J. Hum. Genet. 72 178–184

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Eswaran V 2002 A Diffusion Wave Out of Africa: The mechanism of the modern human revolution?; Curr. Anthropol. 43 749–774

    Google Scholar 

  • Eswaran V, Harpending H and Rogers A R 2005 Genomics refutes an exclusively African origin of humans; J. Hum. Evol. 49 1–18

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Fleagle J G 1988 Primate Adaptation and evolution (San Diego: Academic Press)

    Google Scholar 

  • Fleitmann D Burns S J, Mudelsee M, Neff U, Kramers J, Mangini A and Matter A 2003 Holocene forcing of the Indian monsoon recorded in a stalagmite from Southern Oman; Science 300 1737–1739

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Flynn L J, Sahni A, Jaeger J J, Singh B and Bhatia S B 1990 Additional fossil rodents from the Siwalik Beds of India; Proc. K. Ned. Akad. Wet. 93 7–20

    Google Scholar 

  • Flynn L J, Barry J C, Morgan M E, Pilbeam D R, Jacobs L L, and Lindsay E H 1995 Neogene Siwalik mammalian lineages: species longevities, rates of change, and modes of speciation; Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 115 249–264

    Google Scholar 

  • Gaillard C and Mishra S 2001 The lower Palaeolithic in South Asia; in Origin of settlements and chronology of the palaeolithic cultures in Southeast Asia. Colloque International de la Fondation Singer Polignac (Under the direction of F Sémah, C Falgueres, D Grimaud-Herve, and A Sémah). Semenanjung: Paris

    Google Scholar 

  • Gibert J, Ribot F, Gibert L, Leakey M, Arribas A and Martinez-Navarro B, 1995 Presence of the cercopithecid genus Theropithecus in Cueva Victoria (Murcia, Spain); J. Hum. Evol. 28 487–493

    Google Scholar 

  • Gingerich P D and Sahni A 1979 Indraloris and Sivaladapis: Miocene adapid primates from the Siwaliks of India and Pakistan; Nature (London) 279 415–416

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Goodbred S L and Kuehl S A 2000 Enormous Ganges-Brahmaputra sediment discharge during strengthened early Holocene monsoon; Geology 28 1083–1086

    Google Scholar 

  • Gupta A K 2004 Origin of agriculture and domestication of plants and animals linked to early Holocene climate amelioration; Curr. Sci. 87 54–59

    Google Scholar 

  • Harrison T M, Copeland P, Hall S A, Quade J, Burner S, Ojha T P and Kidd W S F 1993 Isotopic preservation of Himalaya-Tibetan uplift, denudation, and climatic histories in two molasse deposits; J. Geol. 101 157–175

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Hay W W 1996 Tectonics and climate; Geol. Rundsch. 85 409–437

    Google Scholar 

  • He Z 1997 Yuanmou hominoid fauna (Kunming, China: Yunana Science and Technology Press) pp 270

    Google Scholar 

  • Han D 1987 Artiodactyla fossils from Liucheng Gigantopithecus Cave in Guangxi; Mem. Inst. Vert. Palaeontol. Palaeoanthropol. 18 135–208

    Google Scholar 

  • Hoorn C, Ojha T and Quade J 2000 Palynological evidence for vegetation development and climatic change in the sub-Himalayan zone (Neogene, Central Nepal); Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 163 133–161

    Google Scholar 

  • James H V A and Petraglia M D 2005 Modern human origins and the evolution of behavior in the later Pleistocene record of South Asia; Curr. Anthropol. 46 S3–S27

    Google Scholar 

  • Jayaswal V 1982 Chopper-chopping component of Palaeolithic India (New Delhi: Agam Kala Prakashan)

    Google Scholar 

  • Jones S C 2007 The Toba supervolcanic eruption: Tephra-fall deposits in India and Paleoanthropological implications; in The evolution and history of human populations in South Asia (eds.) M D Petraglia and B Allchin (New York: Springer Press) pp 137–170

    Google Scholar 

  • Kale V S, Joshi V U and Hire A S 2004 Palaeohydrological reconstructions based on analysis of a palaeochannel and Toba-Ash associated alluvial sediments in the Deccan Trap region, India; J. Geol. Soc. India 64 403–417

    Google Scholar 

  • Kappelman J, Kelley J, Pilbeam D R, Sheikh K A, Ward S, Anwar M, Barry J C, Brown B, Hake P, Johnson N M, Raza S M, and Imbrahim Shah S M 1991 The earliest occurrence of Sivapithecus from the middle Miocene Chinji Formation of Pakistan; J. Hum. Evol. 21 61–73

    Google Scholar 

  • Karanth K P 2006 Out-of-India Gondwana origin of some tropical Asian biota; Curr. Sci. 90 789–792

    Google Scholar 

  • Kay R 1981 The nut-crackers-a new theory of the adaptations of the Ramapithecinae; Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 55 141–151

    Google Scholar 

  • Kelley J 1986 Paleobiology of Miocene Hominoids, PhD dissertation, Yale University, New Haven, USA

    Google Scholar 

  • Kelley J 1997 Paleobiological and phylogenetic significance of like history in Miocene hominoids; in Function, phylogeny and fossils: Miocene Hominoid origins (eds) D Begun, C Ward and M Rose (New York: Plenum Press) pp 173–208

    Google Scholar 

  • Kelley J and Pilbeam D 1986 The Dryopithecines: taxonomy, comparative anatomy, and phylogeny of Miocene large hominoids; in Systematics, evolution, and anatomy (eds) D Swindler and D J Erwin (New York: Alan R Liss) pp 361–411

    Google Scholar 

  • Kennedy K A R 2003 God — apes and fossil men: Palaeoanthropology of South Asia (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press)

    Google Scholar 

  • Kennedy K A R 2001 Middle and Late Pleistocene Hominids of South Asia; in Humanity from African Naissance to coming Millennia (University of Firenze, Firenze) pp 167–174

    Google Scholar 

  • Kennedy K A R, Sonakia A, Chiment J and Verma K K 1991 Is the Narmada hominid an Indian Homo erectus?; Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 86 475–496

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Kennett J P and Hodell D A 1986 Major events in Neogene oxygen isotopic records; S. Afr. J. Sci. 82 497–498

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Kivisild T 2000 The origins of southern and western Eurasian populations: an mtDNA study, PhD Thesis, Tartu University, Estonia

    Google Scholar 

  • Kivisild T, Papiha S S, Rootsi S, Parik J, Kaldma K, Reidla M, Laos S, Metspalu M, et al. 2000 An Indian ancestry: a key for understanding human diversity in Europe and beyond; in Archaeogenetics: DNA and the population prehistory of Europe (eds) C Renfrew and K Boyle (Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research) pp 267–279

    Google Scholar 

  • Kivisild T, Rootsi S, Metspalu M, Mastana S, Kaldma K, Parik J, Metspalu E, Adojaan, M, et al. 2003 The Genetic Heritage of the Earliest Settlers Persists Both in Indian Tribal and Caste Populations; Am. J. Hum. Genet. 72 313–332

    CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  • Knight M D, Walker G P L, Ellwood B B and Diehl J F 1986 Stratigraphy, palaeomagnetism and magnetic fabric of the Toba tuffs: constraints on the sources and eruptive styles; J. Geophys. Res. B 91 10,355–10,382

    Google Scholar 

  • Kretzoi M 1975 New ramapithecines and Pliopithecus from the lower Pliocene of Rudabanya in northeastern Hungary; Nature (London) 257 578–581

    Google Scholar 

  • Kumar V and B M Reddy 2003 Status of Austro-Asiatic groups in the peopling of India: An exploratory study based on the available prehistoric, linguistic and biological evidences; J. Biosci. 28 507–522

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Kutzbach J E, Prell W L and Ruddiman W F 1993 Sensitivity of Eurasian climate to surface uplift of the Tibetan Plateau; J. Geol. 101 177–190

    Google Scholar 

  • Leakey L S B 1962 A new lower Pliocene fossil primate from Kenya; Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. Ser. 13 689–696

    Google Scholar 

  • Lewis G E 1934 Preliminary notice of man-like apes from India; Am. J. Sci. 27 161–179

    Google Scholar 

  • Majumder P P 2001 Ethnic populations of India as seen from an evolutionary perspective; J. Biosci. 26 533–545

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Marivaux L, Antoine P-O, Rafiqul H B S, Benammi M, Chaimanee Y, Crochet J-Y, de Franceschi D, Iqbal N, et al. 2005 Anthropoid primates from the Oligocene of Pakistan (Bugti Hills): Data on early anthropoid evolution and biogeography; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 102 8436–8441

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Mason B G, Pyle D M and Oppenheimer C 2004 The size and frequency of the largest explosive eruption on the earth; Bull. Volcanol. 66 735–748

    Google Scholar 

  • McCormick M P, Thomason L W, Trepte C R 1995 Atmospheric effects of Mt. Pinatubo eruption; Nature (London) 373 399–404

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Miller S, F Jessica W and Russel L C 2008 Assesing mandibular Shape Variation within Gigantopithecus Using a Geometric Morphometric approach; Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 137 201–212

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Mishra S 1995 Chronology of the Indian Stone Age: The impact of recent absolute and relative dating attempts; Man Environ. 20 11–16

    Google Scholar 

  • Misra V N 1987 Middle Pleistocene Adaptations in India; in The Pleistocene Old World-Regional perspectives (ed.) O Soffer (New York: Plenum Press) pp 99–114

    Google Scholar 

  • Misra V N 1989 Stone Age India: An Ecological Perspective; Man Environ. 14 17–64

    Google Scholar 

  • Misra V N 2001 Prehistoric human colonization of India; J. Biosci. 26 491–531

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Nanda A C and Sehgal R K 1993 Siwalik Mammalian faunas from Ramnagar (J. & K.) and Nurpur (H.P.) and Lower limit of hipparion; J. Geol. Soc. India 42 115–134

    Google Scholar 

  • Nelson S 2003 The extinction of Sivapithecus: Faunal and environmental changes in the Siwaliks of Pakistan (Boston: Brill Academic Publishers)

    Google Scholar 

  • Nelson S 2005 Paleoseasonality inferred from equid teeth and intra-tooth isotopic Variability; Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 222 122–144

    Google Scholar 

  • Ninkovich D, Shackleton N J, Abdel-Monem A A, Obradovich J D and Izett G K 1978 K-Ar age of the late Pleistocene eruption of Toba, north Sumatra; Nature (London) 276 574–577

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Paddayya K 1984 Stone Age India; in Neue Forschungen zur Altsteinseit (ed.) H Muller-Karp (Munich: C H Beck Verlag) pp 345–403

    Google Scholar 

  • Paddayya K, Blackwell B A B, Jhaldiyal R, Petraglia M D, Fevrier S, Chaderton II D A, Blickstein J I B, Skinner A R 2002 Recent findings on the Acheulian of the Hunsgi and Baichbal valleys, Karnataka, with special reference to the Isampur excavation and its dating; Curr. Sci. 83 641–647

    Google Scholar 

  • Pant G B 2003 Long-Term climate variability and change over monsoon Asia; J. Indian Geophys. Uni. 7 125–134

    Google Scholar 

  • Pappu S 2001a A Re-Examination of the Palaeolithic Archaeological Record of Northern Tamil Nadu, South India (British. Archaeol. Rep. Int. Series 1003)

  • Pappu R S 2001b Acheulian culture in Peninsular India (New Delhi: D K Printworld (P) Ltd.)

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R 2000 Siwalik murid rodents: Origin and dispersal; Him. Geol. 21 145–151

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R 2001 Late Pliocene micromammals from Tatrot Formation (Upper Siwalik) exposed near village Saketi, Himalchal Pradesh, India; Palaeontographica 261 55–81

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R 2008 Revisiting Haritalyangar, the Late Miocene ape locality of India; in Elwyn L Simons: A search for origins (eds) J Fleagle and C Gilbert (New York: Springer) pp 197–210

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R and Cameron D W 1997 New Miocene fossil ape locality, Dangar, Hari-Talyangar region, Siwaliks, northern India; J. Hum. Evol. 32 93–97

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R, Cameron D, Sharma J C and Hogarth J 2005 Extinction of Siwalik fossil apes: a review based on a new fossil tooth and on palaeoecological and palaeoclimatological evidence; Anthropol. Sci. 113 65–72

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R 2003 Reconstruction of Upper Siwalik palaeoecology and palaeoclimatology using microfossil palaeocommunities; Palaeogeogr. Palaeoecol. Palaeoclimatol. 197 133–150

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R and David C 2007 On new dates and ecology of recent Hominoid finds from Haritalyangar area, Himachal Pradesh; in Human origins, genome and people of India: genomic, palaeontological and archaeological perspectives (eds) A R Sankhyan and V R Rao (New Delhi: Allied Publishers) pp 91–111

    Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R, Chauhan P R, Rao M R, Blackwell B A B, Skinner A R, Sahni A, Chauhan M S and Khan H S 2009 New geochronological, palaeoclimatological and Palaeolithic data from the Narmada Valley hominin locality, central India; J. Hum. Evol. 56 114–133

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Patnaik R, Sahni A, Cameron D, Pillans B, Chatrath P, Simons E, Williams M and Bibi F 2009 Ostrich-like eggshells from a 10.1 million year old Miocene ape locality, Haritalyangar (Himachal Pradesh) India; Curr. Sci. 96 1485–1495

    Google Scholar 

  • Petraglia M D 1998 The Lower Palaeolithic of India and its bearing on the Asian record; in Early human behavior in global context: The rise and diversity of the Lower Palaeolithic record (eds) M D Petraglia and R Korisettar (New York: Routledge) pp 343–390

    Google Scholar 

  • Petraglia M D 2006 The Indian Acheulean in Global Perspective; in Axe age: Acheulean tool-making from quarry to discard (eds) N Goren-Inbar and G Sharon (London: Equinox) pp 389–414

    Google Scholar 

  • Petraglia M D 2008 Mind the Gap: Factoring the Arabian peninsula and the Indian subcontinent into out of Africa models; in The human revolution revisited (eds) P Mellars, O Bar-Yosef, K Boyle and C Stringer (Cambridge: McDonald Institute Archaeological Publications) pp 383–394

    Google Scholar 

  • Petraglia M D and Allchin B 2007 The evolution and history of human populations in South Asia; in Inter-disciplinary studies in archaeology, biological anthropology, linguistics and genetics (New York: Springer) pp 1–464

    Google Scholar 

  • Petraglia M, Korisettar R, Boivin N, Clarkson C, Ditchfield P, Jones S, Koshy J, Lahr M M, et al. 2007 Middle paleolithic assemblages from the Indian Subcontinent before and after the Toba Super-Eruption; Science 317 114–116

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Pillans B, Williams M, Cameron D, Patnaik R, Hogarth J, Sahni A, Sharma J C, Williams F and Bernor R 2005 Revised correlation of the Haritalyangar magnetostratigraphy, Indian Siwaliks: implications for the age of the Miocene hominids Indopithecaus and Sivapithecus, with a note on a new hominid tooth; J. Hum. Evol. 48 507–515

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Prell W L, Murray D W, Clemens S C and Anderson D M 1992 Evolution and variability of the Indian Ocean summer monsoon: evidence from the western Arabian Sea drilling program; in The Indian ocean: A synthesis of results from the ocean drilling program (ed.) R A Duncan (Geophysical Monograph, No. 70, American Geophysical Union, Washington DC) pp 447–469

    Google Scholar 

  • Quade J T, Cerling T E and Bowman J R 1989 Development of the Asian monsoon revealed by marked ecological shift in the latest Miocene of northern Pakistan; Nature (London) 342 163–166

    Google Scholar 

  • Quade J, Cater J M, Ojha T P, Adam J and Harrison T M 1995 Late Miocene environmental change in Nepal and the northern Indian subcontinent: stable isotopic evidence from paleosols; Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 107 1381–1397

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Quintana-Murci L, Semino O, Bandelt H J, Passarino G, McElreavey K and Santachiar-Benerecetti A S 1999 Genetic evidence of an early exit of Homo sapiens sapiens from Africa through eastern Africa; Nat. Genet. 23 437–441

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Raj R 2008 Occurrence of volcanic ash in the Quaternary alluvial deposits, lower Narmada basin, western India; J. Earth Syst. Sci. 117 41–48

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Rampino M R 2002 Supereruptions as a threat to civilisations on Earth-like Planets; Icarus 156 562–569

    Google Scholar 

  • Rampino M R and Self S 1992 Volcanic winter and accelerated glaciation following the Toba super-eruption; Nature (London) 359 50–52

    Google Scholar 

  • Rampino M R, Self S and Stothers R B 1988 Volcanic winters; Annu. Rev. Earth Planet Sci. 16 73–99

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Ramstein G, Fluteau F, Besse J and Joussaume S 1997 Effect of orogeny, plate motion and land-sea distribution on Eurasian climate change over the past 30 million years; Nature (London) 386 788–795

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Raymo M E and Ruddiman W F 1992 Tectonic forcing of late Cenozoic climate; Nature (London) 359 117–122

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Reddy A J and M Stoneking 1999 Peopling of Sahul: mtDNA variation in Aborignal Australian and Papua New Guinean populations; Am. J. Hum. Genet. 65 808–828

    Google Scholar 

  • Reich D, Thangaraj K, Patterson N, Price A L and Singh L 2009 Reconstructing Indian population history; Nature (London) 461 489–495

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Rendell H M, Hailwood E A and Dennell R W 1987 Magnetic polarity stratigraphy of Upper Siwalik Sub-Group, Soan Valley, Pakistan: implications for early human occupation of Asia; Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 85 488–496

    Google Scholar 

  • Retallack G J 1991 Miocene Paleosols and ape Habitats of Pakistan and Kenya (New York: Oxford University Press)

    Google Scholar 

  • Retallack G J 1995 Palaeosols of the Siwalik Group as a 15 Mys record of South Asian Palaeoclimate; Mem. Geol. Soc. India 32 36–51

    Google Scholar 

  • Rook L, Martyńez-Navarro B and Howell F C 2004 Occurrence of Theropithecus sp. in the Late Villafranchian of Southern Italy and implication for Early Pleistocene “out of Africa” dispersals; J. Hum. Evol. 47 267–277

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Rose M 1986 Further hominoid postcranial specimens from the Late Miocene Nagri formation of Pakistan; J. Hum. Evol. 15 333–368

    Google Scholar 

  • Rose W I and Chesner C A 1987 Dispersal of ash in the great Toba eruption; Geology 15 913–917

    Google Scholar 

  • Rose W I and Chesner C A 1990 Worldwide dispersal of ash and gases from the earth’s largest known eruption: Toba Sumatra, 75ka; Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. (Global and Planetary Change Section) 89 269–275

    Google Scholar 

  • Ruddiman W F and Kutzbach J E 1989 Forcing of late Cenozoic northern hemisphere climate by plateau uplift in Southern Asia and the American West; J. Geophys. Res. 94 409–418

    Google Scholar 

  • Sankalia H D 1974 The prehistory and protohistory of India and Pakistan (Pune: Deccan College and Postgraduate Research Institute)

    Google Scholar 

  • Sankhyan A R 1985 Late occurrence of Sivapithecus in Indian Siwaliks; J. Hum. Evol. 14 573–578

    Google Scholar 

  • Sankhyan A R 1997a A new human fossil from the Central Narmada Basin and its chronology; Curr. Sci. 73 1110–1111

    Google Scholar 

  • Sankhyan A R 1997b Fossil clavicle of a middle Pleistocene hominid from the central Narmada Valley, India; J. Hum. Evol. 32 3–16

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Sankhyan A R 2005 New fossils of Early Stone Age man from Central Narmada Valley; Curr. Sci. 88 704–707

    Google Scholar 

  • Sarich V M and Wilson A C 1967 Immunological time scale for hominid evolution; Science 158 1200–1203

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Schrader H J 1974 Cenozoic marine planktonic diatom stratigraphy of the tropical Indian Ocean; Initial Rep. Deep Sea Drill. Proj. 24 887–968

    Google Scholar 

  • Schlosser M 1924 Fossil Primates of China; Palaeontol. Sinica Ser. D1 1–16

    Google Scholar 

  • Scott R S, J Kappelman and Kelly J 1999 The paleoenvironment of Sivapithecus parvada; J. Hum. Evol. 36 245–274

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Sehgal R K and Nanda A C 2002 Palaeoenvironment and palaeoecology of the Lower and middle Siwalik Subgroups of a part of Northwestern Himalaya; J. Geol. Soc. India 59 517–529

    Google Scholar 

  • Settar S and Korisettar R 2002 Indian archeology in retrospect — Archaeology and interactive disciplines Volume 1 (New Delhi: Manohar and Indian Council of Historical Research)

    Google Scholar 

  • Shackleton N J, Backman H, Zimmerman D V, Kent M A, Hall D G, Roberts D, Schitker J, Baldauf A, et al. 1984 Oxygen isotope calibration of the onset of ice-rafting and history of glaciation in the North Atlantic region; Nature (London) 307 620–623

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Shane P, Westgate J, Williams M and Korisettar R 1995 New Geochemical evidence for the youngest Toba Tuff in India; Quat. Res. 44 200–204

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Simons E L and Chopra S R K 1969 Gigantopithecus Pongidae, Hominoidea): A new species from Northern India; Postilla 138 1–8

    Google Scholar 

  • Simons E L and Ettel P C 1970 Gigantopithecus; Sci. Am. 222 77–85

    Google Scholar 

  • Simons E L and Pilbeam D 1972 Hominid palaeobiology; in The Function and Evolutionary Biology of Primates (ed.) E R Tuttle (Chicago: Aldine-Atherton) pp 36–62

    Google Scholar 

  • Singh G, Wasson R J and Agrawal D P 1990 Vegetational and seasonal climate changes since the last full glacial in the Thar desert, northwestern India; Rev. Paleobot. Palynol. 64 351–358

    Google Scholar 

  • Sukumar R, Ramesh R, Pant R K and Rajagopalan G 1993 A 13C record of late Quaternary climate change from tropical peats in southern India; Nature(London) 364 703–706

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Sukumar R, Suresh H S R and Ramesh R 1995 Climate change and its impact on tropical montane ecosystem in southern India; J. Biogeogr. 22 533–536

    Google Scholar 

  • Sonakia A 1984 The skull cap of early man and associated mammalian fauna from Narmada Valley alluvium, Hoshangabad area, Madhya Pradesh, India; Rec. Geol. Surv. India 113 159–172

    Google Scholar 

  • Stothers R B 1984 The great Tambora eruption in 1815 and its aftermath; Science 224 1191–1198

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Swisher C C III, Curtis G H, Jacob T, Getty A G, Suprijo A and Widiasmoro 1994 Age of earliest known hominids in Java, Indonesia; Science 263 1118–1121

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Takai Masanaru, Saegusa H, Thaung-Htike, Zin-Maung-Maung-Thein 2006 Neogene mammalian fauna in Myanmar; Asian Paleoprimatol. 4 143–172

    Google Scholar 

  • Tang Y 1980 An Early Pleistocene mammalian fauna from Yuxian, Hebei Province and its significance towards stratigraphic subdivision; Vert. PalAsiatica 18 256–267

    Google Scholar 

  • Tchernov E 1992 Eurasian-African biotic exchanges through the Levantine corridor during the Neogene and Quaternary; in Mammalian migration and dispersal events in the European quaternary (eds) W von Koenigswald and L Werdelin L (Senckenberg, Frankfurt Courier Forschungsinstitut) vol. 153, pp 103–123

    Google Scholar 

  • Thapar R 2003 Early India: from the origins to AD 1300 (California: University of California Press)

    Google Scholar 

  • Thomas J V, Parkash B and Mohindra R 2002 Lithofacies and palaeosol analysis of the Middle and Upper Siwalik Groups (Plio-Pleistocene), Haripur-Kolar section, Himachal Pradesh; India Sediment. Geol. 150 343–366

    Google Scholar 

  • Turco R P, Toon O B, Ackerman T P, Pollock J B, Sagan C, 1983 Nuclear winter: Global Consequences of Multiple nuclear explosions; Science 222 1283–1292

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Turco R P, Toon O B, Ackerman T P, Pollock J B and Sagan C 1990 Climate and Smoke: an appraisal of nuclear winter; Science 247 166–176

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Turner A 1992 Large carnivores and earliest European hominids: changing determinants of resource availability during the Lower and Middle Pleistocene; J. Hum. Evol. 22 109–126

    Google Scholar 

  • Vahia M 2004 The harappan question. Available at: www.tifr.res.in/~vahia/harappa.pdf

  • Verma B C 1969 Procynocephalus pinjori sp. nov. a new fossil primate from the Pinjor beds (Lower Pleistocene) east of Chandigarh; J. Palaeontol. Soc. India 13 53–57

    Google Scholar 

  • Viseras C and Fernandez J 1995 The role of erosion and deposition in the construction of alluvial fan sequences in the Guadix Formation (SE Spain); Geol. Mijnbouw 21–33

  • von Koenigswald G H R 1950 Bemerkungen zu Dryopithecus giganteus Pilgrim; Eclogae Geologicae Helvetiae 42 515–519

    Google Scholar 

  • von Koenigswald G H R 1976 The evolution of man (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press)

    Google Scholar 

  • Westgate J, Shane P, Pearce N, Perkins W, Korisettar R, Chesner C, Williams M and Acharyya S K 1998 All Toba tephra occurrences across peninsular India belong to the 75,000 years B.P. eruption; Quat. Res. 50 107–112

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • William M A J and Royce K 1982 Quaternary geology of the middle Son valley, north central India: implications for prehistoric Archaeology; Palaeogeogr. Palaeclimatol. Palaeoecol. 38 139–162

    Google Scholar 

  • West R M 1984 Siwalik fauna from Nepal: palaeoecologic and palaeoclimatic implications; in The evolution of the East Asian environment (ed.) R O Whyte (Hong Kong: University of Hong Kong) vol. 2, pp 724–744

    Google Scholar 

  • Woo J K and Wu X 1984 Hominid fossils from China an their relation to those of neighbouring regions; in The evolution of the East Asian environment (ed.) R O Whyte (Hong Kong: University of Hong Kong) vol. 2, pp 787–795

    Google Scholar 

  • Wynn J G, Alemseged Z, René B, Denis G, Denné R and Diana C R 2006 Geological and palaeontological context of a Pliocene juvenile hominin at Dikika, Ethiopia; Nature (London) 443 332–336

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Zhu R X, Hoffman K A, Potts R, Deng C L, Pan Y X, Guo B, Shi C D, Guo, Z T, Hou Y M and Huang W W 2001 Earliest presence of humans in northeast Asia; Nature (London) 413 413–417

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Zhu R X, An Z, Pots R and Hoffman K A 2003 Magnetostratigraphic dating of early humans in China; Earth Sci. Rev. 61 341–359

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to R. Patnaik.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Patnaik, R., Chauhan, P. India at the cross-roads of human evolution. J Biosci 34, 729–747 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12038-009-0056-9

Download citation

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12038-009-0056-9

Keywords

Navigation