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Gigantopithecus
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===Classification=== ====''G. blacki''==== [[File:Orangutan -Zoologischer Garten Berlin-8a.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''Gigantopithecus'' is closely allied with [[orangutan]]s (a male [[Bornean orangutan]] above).]] In 1935, von Koenigswald considered ''Gigantopithecus'' to be closely allied with the [[Late Miocene]] ''[[Sivapithecus]]'' from India.<ref name=Koenigswald1935/> In 1939, South African palaeontologist [[Robert Broom]] hypothesised that it was closely allied with ''[[Australopithecus]]'' and the [[last common ancestor]] of humans and other apes.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Broom|first=R.|author-link=Robert Broom|year=1939|title=The dentition of the Transvaal Pleistocene anthropoids, ''Plesianthropus'' and ''Paranthropus''|journal=Annals of the Transvaal Museum|volume=19|issue=3|pages=303β314|url=https://journals.co.za/docserver/fulltext/nfi_annalstm/19/3/484.pdf?expires=1587575563&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=2AB75E7DD6F91D015A8D2145BD8137F9}}</ref> In 1946, Jewish German anthropologist [[Franz Weidenreich]] described ''Gigantopithecus'' as a human ancestor as "''Gigantanthropus''", believing that the human lineage went through a gigantic phase. He stated that the teeth are more similar to those of modern humans and ''[[Homo erectus]]'' (at the time "''Pithecanthropus''" for [[Java Man|early Javan specimens]]), and envisioned a lineage from ''Gigantopithecus'', to the Javan ape ''[[Meganthropus]]'' (then considered a human ancestor), to "''Pithecanthropus''", to "''[[Solo Man|Javanthropus]]''", and finally [[Aboriginal Australian]]s. This was part of his [[multiregional origin of modern humans|multiregional hypothesis]], that all modern races and ethnicities evolved independently from a local archaic human species, rather than sharing a more recent and fully modern common ancestor.<ref name=Weidenreich1946>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.531106|first=F.|last=Weidenreich|author-link=Franz Weidenreich|year=1946|title=Apes, Giants, and Man|publisher=University of Chicago Press|pages=[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.531106/page/n68 58]β66}}</ref> In 1952, von Koenigswald agreed that ''Gigantopithecus'' was a [[hominin]], but believed it was an offshoot rather than a human ancestor.<ref>{{cite journal|last=von Koenigswald|first=G. H. R.|author-link=Gustav Heinrich Ralph von Koenigswald|year=1952|title=''Gigantopithecus blacki'' von Koenigswald, a giant fossil hominoid from the Pleistocene of southern China|journal=Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History|volume=43|pages=292β325|hdl=2246/298}}</ref> Much debate followed whether ''Gigantopithecus'' was a hominin or not for the next three decades until the [[Out of Africa theory|Out of Africa]] hypothesis overturned the {{ill|Out of Asia|nl|Out of Asia-theorie}} and multiregional hypotheses, firmly placing humanity's origins in Africa.<ref name=ZhangHarrison2017/><ref name=Hartwig2002/> ''Gigantopithecus'' is now classified in the [[subfamily]] [[Ponginae]], closely allied with ''Sivapithecus'' and ''Indopithecus''. This would make its closest living relatives the [[orangutan]]s. However, there are few similar traits ([[synapomorphies]]) linking ''Gigantopithecus'' and orangutans due to fragmentary remains, with the main morphological argument being its close affinities to ''Sivapithecus'', which is better established as a pongine based on skull features. In 2017, Chinese palaeoanthropologist Yingqi Zhang and American anthropologist Terry Harrison suggested that ''Gigantopithecus'' is most closely allied to the Chinese ''[[Lufengpithecus]]'', which went extinct 4 million years prior to ''Gigantopithecus''.<ref name=ZhangHarrison2017/> In 2019, [[peptide sequencing]] of [[dentine]] and [[Tooth enamel|enamel]] proteins of a ''Gigantopithecus'' molar from [[Chuifeng Cave]] indicates that ''Gigantopithecus'' was indeed closely allied with orangutans, and, assuming the current [[mutation rate]] in orangutans has remained constant, shared a common ancestor about 12β10 million years ago in the [[Middle Miocene|Middle]] to Late Miocene. Their last common ancestor would have been a part of the Miocene [[Adaptive radiation|radiation]] of apes. The same study calculated a divergence time between the Ponginae and African [[great ape]]s about 26β17.7 million years ago.<ref name= "Welker2019">{{cite journal|last1= Welker|first1= F.|last2= Ramos-Madrigal|first2= J.|last3= Kuhlwilm|first3= M.|last4= Liao|first4= W.|last5= Gutenbrunner|first5= P.|last6=de Manuel|first6= M.|last7= Samodova|first7= D.|last8= Mackie|first8= M.|last9= Allentoft|first9=M. E.|last10= Bacon|first10= A.-M.|last11= Collins|first11=M. J.|last12= Cox|first12= J.|last13= Lalueza-Fox|first13 =C.|last14= Olsen|first14=J. V.|last15= Demeter|first15= F.|last16= Wang|first16= W.|last17= Marques-Bonet|first17= T.|last18= Cappellini|first18= E.|display-authors= 3|title= Enamel proteome shows that ''Gigantopithecus'' was an early diverging pongine|journal= Nature|year= 2019|doi= 10.1038/s41586-019-1728-8|pmc= 6908745|pmid= 31723270|volume= 576|issue= 7786|pages= 262β265|bibcode= 2019Natur.576..262W}}</ref> [[Cladogram]] according to Zhang and Harrison, 2017:<ref name=ZhangHarrison2017/> {{clade |label1=[[Hominoidea]] (apes) |1={{clade |1=''[[Hylobates]]'' (gibbons) [[File:Le gibbon (white background).jpg|40 px]] |2={{clade |1=''[[Oreopithecus]]'' |label2=[[Hominidae]] |2={{clade |label2=[[Ponginae]] |1={{clade |1={{clade |1=''[[Ouranopithecus]]'' |2=''[[Dryopithecus]]''[[File:DryopithecusDB15.jpg|50 px]] }} |label2=[[Homininae]] |2={{clade |1=''[[Gorilla]]'' (gorillas) [[File:Gorila de llanura occidental. Gorilla gorilla - Blanca MartΓ de Ahumada (white background).jpg|50 px]] |label2=[[Hominini]] |2={{clade |1=''[[Pan (genus)|Pan]]'' (chimpanzees) [[File:PanTroglodytesSmit (white background).jpg|50 px]] |2=''[[Australopithecus]]'' and ''[[Homo]]'' (humans) [[File:Bechuana of Distinction-1841 (white background).jpg|60 px]] }} }} }} |2={{clade |1='''''Gigantopithecus''''' [[File:Gigantopithecus.png|80 px]] |2={{clade |1=''[[Lufengpithecus]]'' |2={{clade |1=''[[Ankarapithecus]]'' |2={{clade |1=''[[Sivapithecus]]'' |2=''[[Pongo (genus)|Pongo]]'' (orangutans) [[File:Simia satyrus - 1837 - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam - White Background.jpg|50 px]] }} }} }} }} }} }}}}}} {{clear}} ===="''G. bilaspurensis''"==== In 1969, an 8.6 million year old mandible from the [[Sivalik Hills]] in northern India was classified as "''G. bilaspurensis''" by palaeontologists [[Elwyn L. Simons]] and {{ill|Shiv Raj Kumar Chopra|de}}, who believed it was the ancestor of ''G. blacki''.<ref name=ZhangHarrison2017/><ref name=Hartwig2002>{{cite book|first=W. C.|last=Hartwig|year=2002|title=The Primate Fossil Record|publisher=Cambridge University Press|pages=371β372|isbn=0-521-66315-6|url={{google books|plainurl=yes|id=Ezm1OA_s6isC|page=371}}}}</ref> This bore resemblance to a molar discovered in 1915 in the Pakistani [[Pothohar Plateau]] then classified as "''[[Dryopithecus]] giganteus''". Von Koenigswald reclassified "''D. giganteus''" in 1950 into its own genus, ''[[Indopithecus]]'', but this was changed again in 1979 to "''G. giganteus''" by American anthropologists Frederick Szalay and Eric Delson<ref>{{cite book|first1=F.|last1=Szalay|first2=E.|last2=Delson|year=1979|title=Evolutionary History of the Primates|publisher=Academic Press|pages=493β494|isbn=1-4832-8925-7|url={{google books|plainurl=yes|id=jE7gBAAAQBAJ|page=493}}}}</ref> until ''Indopithecus'' was resurrected in 2003 by Australian anthropologist {{ill|David W. Cameron|qid=Q27947828|s=1|v=sup}}.<ref name="ZhangHarrison2017"/><ref>{{cite journal|last=Cameron|first=D. W.|year=2003|title=A functional and phylogenetic interpretation of the late Miocene Siwalik hominid ''Indopithecus'' and the Chinese Pleistocene hominid ''Gigantopithecus''|journal=Himalayan Geology|volume=24|issue=2|pages=19β28|url=https://www.himgeology.com/volume_details.php?volume=35|access-date=12 February 2025|url-access=subscription}}</ref> "''G. bilaspurensis''" is now considered a [[Taxonomic synonym|synonym]] of ''Indopithecus giganteus'', leaving ''Gigantopithecus'' [[monotypic]] (with only one species), ''G. blacki''.<ref name="ZhangHarrison2017"/><ref>{{cite journal|last=Cameron|first=D. W.|year=2001|title=The taxonomic status of the Siwalik late Miocene hominid ''Indopithecus'' (= ''Gigantopithecus'')|journal=Himalayan Geology|volume=22|issue=2|pages=29β34|url=https://www.himgeology.com/volume_details.php?volume=38|access-date=12 February 2025|url-access=subscription}}</ref>
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