We now know what killed humans’ largest relative – and it’s eerie

A scattering of fossilised teeth and four jawbones recovered from caves in the Karst plains of southern China are all that remain of history’s biggest primate – the three-metre tall,orangutan-likeGigantopithecus blacki.

The hulking 300-kilogram primate evolved 2 million years ago and roamed Pleistocene forests until it vanished. Exactly when and whyGigantowent extinct has been a tantalising holy grail in palaeontology.

Now Australian researchers have led a massive analysis ofGigantoteeth to pinpoint the reason for the giant ape’s doom. And the answer is eerily prescient:theGigantofailed to adapt to a changing climate.

Gigantopithecus blacki really is one of the biggest mysteries in palaeontology,” Associate Professor Kira Westaway,who co-led the study from Macquarie University,said.

“We only know this species from teeth and parts of jawbone. That’s it – nothing from the neck down. That’s amazing considering it was around for at least 2 million years.”

An artist impression of a group of G. blacki within a forest in southern China

An artist impression of a group of G. blacki within a forest in southern ChinaGarcia/Joannes - Boyau (Southern Cross University)

Six Australian universities datedGigantoteeth with different techniques to narrow down the extinction window to between 295,000 and 215,000 years ago.

Westaway specialises in a type of dating called luminescence dating,which involves pinpointing a light-sensitive signal found in quartz or feldspar that builds the longer fossil sediment lies in the dark.

“You can imagine my lab is pretty stressful,” Westaway said. “If somebody comes in with a mobile phone,that’s 10 years worth of work all ruined in a couple of seconds. I’m like the light police.”

Establishing the extinction window allowed the researchers to deduce what might’ve triggeredGiganto’s downfall.

Ancient pollen grains alongside the fossilised teeth showed there was still forest around whenGigantovanished,busting the idea they died because their habitat morphed into grassland.

Associate Professor Kira Westaway works with a red light to avoid ruining the light-sensitive signals she uses to date fossils.

Associate Professor Kira Westaway works with a red light to avoid ruining the light-sensitive signals she uses to date fossils.Louis Douvis

But by the timeGigantodied out,the climate had shifted to become more seasonal. Suddenly,the fruits it gorged upon became sporadic rather than year-round as weather grew variable.

So why did this shift spell the end of theGiganto,while its close neighbour,the orangutan – which lived in the same forests with a similar diet – prevailed?

Southern Cross University geochemist Dr Renaud Joannes-Boyau analysed isotopes within the teeth and scoured them for pits and scratches to infer howGiganto reacted to the changing climate.

The analysis showedGigantofell back on fibrous,nutrient-scarce twigs and bark foraged from the forest floor.

Restrained by their massive bulk,they were unable to roam and adapt like their smaller,agile orange cousins,which nourished themselves on a rich diet of shoots,leaves,insects,nuts and fruit from the high canopy.

It wasn’t the climate change,per se,that killed theGiganto,Westaway said. “It was the way they responded to it.”

The mountainous location of two caves in southern China where fossils of the largest-ever primate have been found.

The mountainous location of two caves in southern China where fossils of the largest-ever primate have been found.Yingqi Zhang

The findings have implications for the conservation of orangutans and mountain gorillas under modern-day anthropogenic climate change,Westaway said.

The research will feature on the front cover ofNature,one of the world’s most prestigious science journals. Within her findings,Westaway sees an implicit lesson for theGiganto’smodern relatives.

Digging into the hard cemented cave sediments containing a wealth of fossils and evidence of G. blacki in a southern China cave.

Digging into the hard cemented cave sediments containing a wealth of fossils and evidence of G. blacki in a southern China cave.Kira Westaway

“We’re facing major climate changes,and theGiganto couldn’t even adapt to these very small climate changes … It’s a bit worrying really,isn’t it?”

The Examine newsletter explains and analyses science with a rigorous focus on the evidence.Sign up to get it each week.

correction

A graphic on this story incorrectly said the weight of the Gigantopithecus blacki was 540 kilograms. It was 300 kilograms,per the story.

Angus Dalton is a science reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald.

Most Viewed in National