NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 28, 2004 - 5A After eons, bones of dwarf cavewoman uncovered The Associated Press In a breathtaking discovery, scientists work- ing on a remote Indonesian island say they have uncovered the bones of a human dwarf species marooned for eons while modern man rapidly colonized the rest of the planet. One tiny specimen, an adult female measur- ing about 3 feet tall, is described as "the most extreme" figure to be included in the extended human family. Certainly, she is the shortest. This hobbit-sized creature appears to have lived as recently as 18,000 years ago on the island of Flores, a kind of tropical Lost World populated by giant lizards and miniature ele- phants. She is the best example of a trove of frag- mented bones that account for as many as seven of these primitive individuals. Scientists have named the new species Homo floresien- sis, or Flores Man. The specimens' ages range from 95,000 to 12,000 years old. The discovery has astonished anthropolo- gists unlike any in recent memory. Flores Man is a totally new creature that was fundamental- ly different from modern humans. Yet it lived i until the threshold of recorded human history, probably crossing paths with the ancestors of today's islanders. "This finding really does rewrite our knowl- edge of human evolution," said Chris String- er, who directs human origins studies at the Natural History Museum in London. "And to have them present less than 20,000 years ago is frankly astonishing." Flores Man was hardly formidable. His grapefruit-sized brain was about a quarter the size of the brain of our species, Homo sapiens. It is closer in size to the brains of transitional prehuman species in Africa more than 3 mil- lion years ago. Evidence suggests Flores Man made stone tools, lit fires and organized group hunts for meat. Just how this primitive, remnant species managed to hang on is unclear. Geologic evi- dence suggests a massive volcanic eruption sealed its fate some 12,000 years ago, along with other unusual species on the island. Researchers say the perseverance of Flores Man smashes the conventional wisdom that modern humans began to systematically crowd out other upright-walking species 160,000 years ago and have dominated the planet alone for tens of thousands of years. And it demonstrates that Africa, the acknowledged cradle of humanity, does not hold all the answers to persistent questions of how we came to be. "It is arguably the most significant discov- ery concerning our own genus in my lifetime," said anthropologist Bernard Wood of George Washington University, who reviewed the research independently. Discoveries simply "don't get any bet- ter than that," proclaimed Robert Foley and Marta Mirazon Lahr of Cambridge University in a written analysis. To others, the specimen's baffling combina- tion of slight dimensions and coarse features bears almost no meaningful resemblance either to modern humans or to our large, archaic cousins. They suggest that Flores Man doesn't belong in the genus Homo at all, even if it was a recent contemporary. But they are unsure how to classify the species. "I don't think anybody can pigeonhole this into the very simple-minded theories of what is human," anthropologist Jeffery Schwartz of the University of Pittsburgh. "There is no biological reason to call it Homo. We have to rethink what it is." Details of the discovery appear in Thurs- day's issue of the journal Nature. Researchers from Australia and Indonesia found the partial skeleton 13 months ago in a shallow limestone cave known as Liang Bua. The cave, which extends into a hillside for about 130 feet, has been the subject of scien- tific analysis since 1964. The female skeleton and fragments from the six other individuals are being stored in a laboratory in Jakarta, Indonesia. The cave, which now is surrounded by coffee farms, is fenced off and patrolled by guards. Near the skeleton were stone tools and animal remains, including teeth from a young stego- don, or prehistoric dwarf elephant, as well as fish, birds and rodents. Some of the bones were charred, suggesting they were cooked. Excavations are continuing. In 1998, stone tools and other evidence found on Flores sug- gested the presence 900,000 years ago of another early human, Homo erectus. The tools were found a century after the celebrated dis- Now, researchers suneest H. erectus spread to remote Flores and throughout the region. perhaps on bamboo rafts. Caves on surround- ing islands are the target of future studies. they said. Researchers suspect that Flores Man prob- ably is an H. erectus descendant that was squeezed by evolutionary pressures. Nature is full of mammals living in margin- al, isolated environments that gradually dwart when food isn't plentiful and predators aren't threatening. On Flores, the Komodo dragon and other large meat-eating lizards prowled. But Flores Man didn't have to worry about violent human neighbors. This is the first time that the evolution of dwarfism has been recorded in a humaw rela- tive, said the study's lead author, Peter Brown of the University of New England in Austra- lia. Scientists are still struggling to identify its jumbled features. Many say its face and skull features show sufficient traits to be included in the Home family that includes modern humans. It would be the eighth species in the Homo category. covery in the 1890s of big-boned fossils in eastern Java. H. erectus Student struggles with cocaine addiction, then rehab COCAINE Continued from page 1A short. But he continued to snort it recre- ationally until the spring of 2003. From Recreation to Addiction-Spring 2003 Things were different that year for Steve, who now lived on Greenwood Street - notorious for partying - and he was bored without classes, he said. He increased his party lifestyle and with it, cocaine use. "Coke had a unique high that I liked. It allowed me to stay up all night and talk to anyone I wanted to. We had parties at my house three nights a week. I was drinking and smoking weed three times a day, and yeah, maybe I just wanted something dif- ferent," Steve said. At the height of his cocaine abuse, Steve said he was doing it four or five times a week. He said he bought $100 of cocaine once every week and would throw it on the kitchen table for him and his housemates to share. "You cut pieces off with a razor blade, crush it up with a card, then you split it up into lines. Withdrawal sets in 20 minutes after the last line," Steve said. Steve said they would do lines all night, often ordering more at five or six in the morning. The cocaine binge often lasted until 10 or 11 in the morning, when at last Steve would pass out, exhausted from the night's escapades. His best friend Trevor watched as cocaine, once a boredom buster, became a way of life for Steve. "There are key warning signs that clue you in to the ability to tell the difference between recreational use and addiction. There is a point where they've crossed the line, where they don't know the difference between recreational use and being depen- dant on the substance," Trevor said. That spring, Steve was whittling away. In a few short months, Steve who is 6 feet tal, said his plummeted from 160 to 130 pounds. Steve said it made him sick to his stomach to eat, and shrunk his body tissue. "I couldn't get out of bed if I didn't do cocaine first. My addiction to it was greater than my desire to stop," Steve said. But it wasn't just Steve's body that was wasting away with his abuse of cocaine. A domino affect of destruction spread through Steve's social circle. Snow freezes over relationships Steve said he watched as his relationship with his girlfriend deteriorated. Although he was addicted, Steve said he did not want to drag his girlfriend into a lifestyle of cocaine use. He stopped her from experi- menting excessively with cocaine, but ended up isolated from her. "I was a mess you know, I was a terrible boyfriend. At a certain point I preferred doing cocaine to hanging out with her," Steve said. Steve added that he hung out more with girls who snorted cocaine and also cheated on his girlfriend. Eventually, cocaine became one factor that led him to break up with his girlfriend of more than nine months. Trevor was also hit by Steve's drug prob- lems. He said during that time their friend- ship was almost nonexistent. "It's difficult when you have someone as close to you as a brother that you can't even have a conversation with, who you've lost trust with and whose life you're worried about," Trevor said. Steve said as his addiction to cocaine increased, he became less likely to return his parent's phone calls. Instead he hid from them behind a cell phone that they could not longer reach him on. "He did not have a good relationship with my parents for a long long time. He didn't return any of their phone calls. And he was constantly asking (me) for money," said Mark, his twin brother who also attended the University and wished to be left unnamed. Steve said he reached an all-time low when, he binged on cocaine before going to his parents house. "Once I drove home after having done it all night, I came home at five in the morn- ing. I woke up to both my parents over me shaking yelling 'wake up.' I guess it took like 20 minutes to wake me up - that was bad, really bad," Steve said. It was that incident - having his parents screaming, almost not waking up - that jolted Steve back to reality. He tried to quit cocaine for a month in August, but when school started back up, so did his cocaine habit. It was then that he realized he needed drastic help. He withdrew from all of his classes and he escaped from the University's party scene and decided to fight for his life. Rehabilitation... Facing the beast In the winter semester of 2004, Steve moved back home. He left his dealers and friends to begin rehabilitation at Pine Crest Clinic. At the same time, he enrolled at Grand Valley State University. At first Steve said he suffered huge mood swings, as he quit pot, alcohol and cocaine. He said he was always on edge and felt miserable. But eventually he began to feel better than he had in years, Steve said. "The first month or two after I quit I had huge mood swings, but six weeks after I stopped doing coke, I quit drinking and weed and de-toxed for 30 days. I felt a lot better than I had for four years," he said. Steve attributed much of win against cocaine addiction to his family, who he said despite everything supported him through the ordeal. "(My parents) definitely weren't happy, they didn't know why I started but they just wanted me to get better," Steve said. After a semester at rehab Steve came back to the University, for one last semes- ter to finish up what he started. He said he wants something good to come out of his personal struggle with cocaine. "I think it would be helpful if there was a visible program on campus that students could go to if they needed help with a sub- stance abuse problem," Steve said. SBC Continued from page I After the initial announcement. the respective athletic departments were showered with complaints from media and fans alike, questioning whether the sponsorship would hurt the tradition and aura that surrounds the game. "The Big House is called Michigan Stadium," LSA junior Nick Benson said. "It doesn't have a corporate name attached to it and that's how we need to keep the game. It's pure football. It's the greatest rivalry in sports. and corporate sponsorship would just really take away from what's going on down on the field." The inside of Michigan Stadium is one of the. few major Division I stadiums that is free of adver- tising. Martin said the possibility of upsetting that traditional game-watching environment bothered many fans. "Many of (the complaints) were talking about as much as anything 'Don't mess with Michigan Sta- dium' in terms of advertising - which wewr doing anyway," Martin said. The Nov. 22 meeting between the Wolverines and the Buckeyes takes place in Columbus this year, and Michigan is currently tied for first place with Wis- consin in the Big Ten standings. If Michit4 past Michigan State this weekend and Northw' on Nov. 13, the game against Ohio State will help decide a Big Ten title again, something which "the game" features very often. "If people want to make money off this game, that's going to happen," Benson said. "But attaching some name to it just completely takes away from what's going on." Daily staff reporter Donn Fresard contributed to this report. 0