Jan 28

The Rise And Fall Of A Vulnerable Giant

King Kong might be relegated to the silver screen, but there is no denying the existence of its real-life prehistoric counterpart – a 10ft behemoth known as Gigantopithecus blacki. For millions of years, this enormous ape roamed what is today modern-day China, but then something happened around 600,000 years ago that eventually caused it to go extinct.

What’s interesting is that we actually know very little about Gigantopithecus save for what can be ascertained from a few fossilized teeth and jawbone fragments. We don’t even know what it looked like and no complete skeleton has ever been found. Determining exactly what wiped the species out, therefore, has long proven a challenge.

Now in a renewed effort to solve this mystery, scientists including Associate Professor Kira Westaway of Macquarie University ventured to China’s Guangxi Province to explore 22 separate caves from which they collected samples of pollen, fossils and sediment.

By analyzing these samples, they were able to build up a picture of the region’s environmental history.

It turns out that around 2.3 million years ago, the region was covered in dense forests that would have been the perfect habitat for Gigantopithecus.

Around 600,000 years ago, however, things began to change.

“The more seasonal climate created dry periods when fruits were difficult to find,” Westaway told IFL Science. “G. blacki relied on a less nutritious fall back food such as bark and twigs whereas [orangutans were] more flexible in [their] fall back food, eating shoots, leaves, flowers, nuts, seeds, and even insects and small mammals.”

Unable to adapt or roam very far due to its immense size, Gigantopithecus gradually dwindled in number while orangutans adapted to take advantage of these new opportunities.

 

Link to video

 

Source: IFL Science

 

 

3 Responses to “The Rise And Fall Of A Vulnerable Giant”

  1. Ron S

    Man, I hate to come off with these altruistic statements because I know darn well I’m no Saint myself… But who the hell are we if we’re worried about what some extinct ape was chewing on a half a million years ago when we got people of all ages out there that don’t know what they’re going to chew on today or tomorrow? For the love…🙏🏼

    • David T

      Not every one wants to be a social worker or a homeless advocate. People have different interests and talents so some are inclined to research and others are better at helping people at a professional level. One is not better than the other.

  2. Linda B

    My husband is always saying, “who cares!” when I’m glued to the set watching an archaeological team explore a cave or an Egyptian tomb, but for me it’s fresh discovery and mystery all the way. I do think the word “extinct”, which we’ve all taken for granted these scientists know what they’re talking about when they say a species is extinct, is overused and quite possibly not true in many cases. As I was one to cower behind my dad when watching King Kong back in the day on TV, I’m hoping this is one big monkey that is gone for sure.

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