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On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/

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<span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><b><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Unica&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase"><a href="https://www.sapiens.org/?s=&amp;article_type%5B%5D=essay"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">ESSAY</span></span></span></a> / <a href="https://www.sapiens.org/?s=&amp;kicker%5B%5D=uncanny-valley"><span style="color:black"><span style="font-weight:normal"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">UNCANNY VALLEY</span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></b></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:45.0pt"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:45.0pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">On Flores Island, Do “Ape-Men” Still Exist?</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:33.75pt"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:29.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Islanders have long claimed ape-like humans, remarkably similar to the fossil species <i>Homo floresiensis</i>, survive in secluded forests of Indonesia. An anthropologist investigates why.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Unica&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">By<span style="text-transform:uppercase"> <a href="https://www.sapiens.org/authors/gregory-forth/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">GREGORY FORTH</span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Unica&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">26 APR 2023</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Lio community member Noko looks at a distant spot where he claims he and a cousin once saw the Flores Island ape-man.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Excerpted from <a href="http://pegasusbooks.com/books/between-ape-and-human-9781639361434-hardcover"><i><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Between Ape and Human: An Anthropologist on the Trail of a Hidden Hominoid</span></span></span></i></a> by Gregory Forth. Pegasus Books, 2022. All rights reserved.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">DURING ETHNOGRAPHIC FIELDWORK</span></span></span></span></i><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> on the Indonesian island of Flores between 1984 and 2003, I recorded local accounts of small-bodied, ape-like humans who reportedly lived on the island. When the discovery of the fossil hominin </span></span></span></i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Homo floresiensis <i>was announced in 2004, I was taken aback by the remarkable resemblance between the locally described “ape-men” and paleoanthropological reconstructions of the late Pleistocene fossils. Exploring how this correspondence might be explained, I continued my investigations during 10 subsequent field trips between 2005 and 2018. The result is my 2022 book. The following excerpted essay is from the book’s first chapter.</i></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">In the far reaches of the Indonesian archipelago lies Flores Island, a long, narrow land of high mountains, precipitous cliffs, and deep ravines. The island is home to some remarkable creatures, including the <a href="https://www.sapiens.org/biology/homo-floresiensis-rat-bones/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Flores giant rat</span></span></span></a>, a tree-dwelling beast that can grow 70 centimeters nose-to-tail. Also found on Flores is the world’s largest lizard, the <a href="https://www.sapiens.org/biology/island-dwarfism/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Komodo dragon</span></span></span></a>, a venomous carnivore that can attain a length of more than 3 meters.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">In ancient times, Flores Island once had the now-extinct pygmy <i>Stegodon</i>, elephant-like creatures no larger than a cow. But my concern is with an even more remarkable and even less expected animal—or perhaps two animals of very similar kinds.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.sapiens.org/app/uploads/2023/04/02L_Musee-des-Confluences.jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">The meter-tall <i>Homo floresiensis</i> (front) lived at the same time as early <i>Homo sapiens</i> (left) and <i>Homo neanderthalensis</i> (right).</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Robert Deyrail/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">One is an extremely small-bodied fossil human <a href="https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/ancient-human-species/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">named <i>Homo floresiensis</i></span></span></span></a>, known from remains found in 2003 at Liang Bua in western Flores. Standing little more than a meter tall—the height of a 2–3-year-old child—<a href="https://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-floresiensis"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">the tiny species</span></span></span></a> quickly became nicknamed “the hobbit,” after the J.R.R. Tolkien characters.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Paleoanthropologists described the hobbit’s skeletal features as “archaic,” comparable in some ways to australopiths who lived 2–4 million years ago. Yet <i>H. floresiensis </i>lived as recently as 50,000 years ago.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">The other humanlike creature, which for convenience I call “ape-man,” has yet to be scientifically identified. [1] But one group that populates Flores Island, a people called Lio, claims these creatures are alive—if not well—in isolated sections of their mountainous territory.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">IN THEIR OWN LANGUAGE</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">, the Lio name these ape-men <i>lai ho’a</i>. They describe them as small—in fact, about the same size as <i>H. floresiensis</i>—upright walking and hairy. Individual Lio offer credible accounts of <i>lai ho’a</i> they have seen, including eyewitness encounters dating from the 1960s to the 2010s.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Archaeological dates suggest <i>H. floresiensis</i> had been living on the island since around 100,000 years ago. The species’ ancestors may have arrived much earlier. But because dates are available only from a single site, when <i>H. floresiensis</i> disappeared—or even if it disappeared—is not known.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">There’s reason to believe Flores Island ape-men could be present-day descendants of <i>H. floresiensis</i>. If so, it could mean that this species still shares Flores Island with modern humans. On the other hand, the humanlike creatures Lio speak of could be purely imaginary. Which solution is best supported by the evidence is what interests me.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">LIVING SOME 300–400 KILOMETERS</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> east of the site where <i>H. floresiensis</i> was discovered, Lio occupy one of the island’s most mountainous regions—rugged country by any standard.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Not long ago, Lio people mainly practiced slash-and-burn (or swidden) cultivation. In highland gardens carved out of mountain forests, they planted maize, rice, millet, and other cereals, and a variety of vegetables and tubers. In the 1930s and 1940s, part of the population began cultivating rice in permanent irrigated fields located in lower-lying places. About the same time, some Lio also abandoned highland villages to build settlements nearer to paddy fields.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.sapiens.org/app/uploads/2023/04/03_Rice-paddies-near-homes.jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:blue"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Today many Lio reside in villages near irrigated rice paddies that they farm.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Hermes Images/AGF/Universal Images Group/Getty Images</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Even so, many farmers still plant highland gardens and reside at higher elevations, often a considerable distance from roads and other modern institutions. During the 20th-century, Lio forests shrank due to human activities. Yet the highest mountains remain covered in jungle. It is mainly in these regions that the Lio say people, very occasionally, encounter ape-men.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">THE FLORES ISLAND</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> ape-man is a figure I’ve reconstructed from the statements of numerous Lio people.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">I’ve never seen an ape-man, and partly for this reason some readers may want to dismiss any resemblance between these creatures and apparently long-extinct hominins as mere coincidence. One purpose of my research is to question such dismissal.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">I can immediately discount the possibility that the ape-man simply reflects local familiarity with the scientific discovery and reconstruction of <i>H. floresiensis</i>. I was lucky. I first recorded physical descriptions of the Lio ape-man in July 2003. That was over two months before paleoanthropologists came across the remains of <i>H. floresiensis</i> in September of 2003 and well over a year before the discovery was announced to the public. Even after that time, very few Flores Islanders learned much about the discovery.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">This doesn’t mean ape-men exist as flesh-and-blood creatures—as opposed to imaginary beings existing only in people’s minds. But actually demonstrating that ape-men are imaginary is no easy task. One might attempt to show that the thing’s existence contradicts the laws of physics or principles of biological evolution.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">To be sure, some Lio reports <i>do</i> defy basic science. Fantastic claims assert ape-men can “disappear” or even “fly.” Yet many Lio accounts adhere to a thoroughly naturalistic depiction. If such realistically represented things do not exist, there remains the question of why people think they do—indeed, why some give seemingly credible accounts of ape-man sightings.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">MY STUDIES ON</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> Flores Island have been <a href="https://www.sapiens.org/culture/what-is-cultural-anthropology/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">broadly ethnographic</span></span></span></a>, meaning that I investigate how people organize their social and spiritual lives, what they believe, and what they consider valid knowledge. Like all ethnographers, I’ve pursued this research by living with local people over long periods of time and conversing with them in languages in which they are fluent.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">My first stint of fieldwork on Flores Island was in 1984. Since then, I’ve returned to Flores 19 times, typically spending two to three months in the field.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">As an anthropologist, I’m fully aware that verbal evidence of any kind can be fabricated, exaggerated, or simply mistaken. I’m mainly talking, of course, about statements by people who claim to have seen Flores Island ape-men.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Yet one can evaluate putative sightings by considering the physical setting and people’s descriptions (do they sound like another animal—a monkey, say—or a tree stump or rock, or indeed, something dreamt?). One can also assess the personality, character, and social status of witnesses, including what interest they may have in representing something in a particular way.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.sapiens.org/app/uploads/2023/04/04R_Gado.jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Some Lio, like ritual specialist Goda, might have personal or professional reasons for claiming to see ape-man.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">For this reason, I place less reliance on accounts by people of a supernatural bent, most notably dealers in magically powerful ape-men body parts or substances and “people of power” (<i>ata bhisa</i>) or “people of skill (or knowledge)” (<i>ata mbe’o</i>). [2] These people serve as spiritual healers, magicians, and sorcerers. They might have a personal—one might also say a professional—interest in claiming experience of things unfamiliar to others.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">The most valuable ape-men reports are those where two or more people claimed to have seen the same thing simultaneously; I recorded several such accounts. But even in these instances, all witnesses could have been mistaken or misremembered what they saw.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">How can I be sure <i>anything</i> I heard reflects a natural creature corresponding to a scientifically unknown species? The short answer is I can’t. Even so, several considerations reduce my uncertainty—and may do the same for readers.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">I BEGIN WITH DELIBERATE</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> deception. Researchers can find dishonest individuals in any field setting. There are ways of identifying people, with reference to personal traits, social position, and interests, who are inclined to deceive or exaggerate (such as the aforementioned sorcerers).</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">But there are also reasons to believe that much of what people tell any anthropologist is accurate—at least in people’s honest understanding. Most of what people said about Flores Island ape-men agreed with what others said. And where accounts diverged, it was usually possible to find a reason why.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Also, deception and fabrication require effort. It’s far easier for people to tell the truth (as they see it) or simply say they don’t know—surely, the best way to get rid of a troublesome anthropologist. Not only that, fabrication requires a motive.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Sometimes, people may tell mistruths to convey what they think an inquirer wants to hear. But it’s unclear why Lio might have thought I was soliciting naturalistic depictions of ape-men. It’s more likely that some people were inclined to stress supernatural aspects. For people knew I was also interested in such things as local spirits, witches, and magical beliefs and practices.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Mistruths might be told to pull someone’s leg. A person in the U.S. or Canada might tell someone they’d seen Bigfoot to fool them. But this wouldn’t work among the Lio. For Lio regard their ape-men as real although rare animals, whose existence no one disputes. A North American parallel might be telling a person you’d seen, say, a wolverine, an animal even experienced outdoorspeople rarely encounter in the wild; even if the claim was false, it would hardly constitute leg-pulling.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Lio were familiar with ape-men long before the arrival of missionaries or other agents of colonialism. What’s more, secondary-school curricula have little if anything to say about paleoanthropology or human evolution. So far as I could discover, textbooks—or, for that matter, any of the few books that are locally available—do not include illustrations of non–<i>Homo sapiens</i> human ancestors.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Educated Florenese Catholics, including Indonesian priests, are openly critical of Darwinian evolution, and ordinary Lio villagers are barely aware of it. Their Indigenous cosmology contains nothing comparable to a view of present-day humans or animals having gradually evolved from physically different ancestors.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">There’s no reason to suppose that their view of Flores Island ape-men has in any way been shaped by the discovery of <i>H. floresiensis</i>. Having no stake in and little knowledge of paleoanthropology, Lio would have no reason to doubt that a small bipedal animal combining features of humans and apes could exist in their territory.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">FOR LIO, FLORES ISLAND</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> ape-men are part of the local environment as much as any other rare creature, such as Komodo dragons. Unlike Bigfoot believers, no Lio ever goes looking for ape-men. Lio have no motive—financial, social, or otherwise—for finding an ape-man specimen. And because they are barely aware of outside scientific views—or any view that claims such creatures do not exist—they have no ideological interest in proving any “scientific establishment” wrong.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.sapiens.org/app/uploads/2023/04/05_Jata.jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:blue"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Jata stands where she reportedly saw an ape-man cross a stream on Flores Island.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">As this should suggest, Lio are also less biased than scientists who reject the possibility of non–<i>H. sapiens</i> bipedal apes surviving to the present. Some academics and nonacademics dismiss any knowledge of the natural world that has not received the seal of scientific approval.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">But these skeptics should wonder why Lio think Flores Island ape-men exist. They ought to give the Lio people a fair hearing. I have, in part because of the arrestingly naturalistic way people describe <i>lai ho’a</i>.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">If accepted as plausible accounts of real creatures, what Lio say presents a challenge to biology and paleoanthropology. If not, another challenge arises: to explain why people subscribe to the empirical existence of entities with little or no basis in observable reality.</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.sapiens.org/authors/gregory-forth/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Open Bio</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />
Therapoid
Title: On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
Description:
<span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><b><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Unica&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase"><a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/?s=&amp;article_type%5B%5D=essay"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">ESSAY</span></span></span></a> / <a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/?s=&amp;kicker%5B%5D=uncanny-valley"><span style="color:black"><span style="font-weight:normal"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">UNCANNY VALLEY</span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></b></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:45.
0pt"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:45.
0pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">On Flores Island, Do “Ape-Men” Still Exist?</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:33.
75pt"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:29.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Islanders have long claimed ape-like humans, remarkably similar to the fossil species <i>Homo floresiensis</i>, survive in secluded forests of Indonesia.
An anthropologist investigates why.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Unica&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">By<span style="text-transform:uppercase"> <a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/authors/gregory-forth/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">GREGORY FORTH</span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Unica&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">26 APR 2023</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Lio community member Noko looks at a distant spot where he claims he and a cousin once saw the Flores Island ape-man.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Excerpted from <a href="http://pegasusbooks.
com/books/between-ape-and-human-9781639361434-hardcover"><i><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Between Ape and Human: An Anthropologist on the Trail of a Hidden Hominoid</span></span></span></i></a> by Gregory Forth.
Pegasus Books, 2022.
All rights reserved.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">DURING ETHNOGRAPHIC FIELDWORK</span></span></span></span></i><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> on the Indonesian island of Flores between 1984 and 2003, I recorded local accounts of small-bodied, ape-like humans who reportedly lived on the island.
When the discovery of the fossil hominin </span></span></span></i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Homo floresiensis <i>was announced in 2004, I was taken aback by the remarkable resemblance between the locally described “ape-men” and paleoanthropological reconstructions of the late Pleistocene fossils.
 Exploring how this correspondence might be explained, I continued my investigations during 10 subsequent field trips between 2005 and 2018.
The result is my 2022 book.
The following excerpted essay is from the book’s first chapter.
</i></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">In the far reaches of the Indonesian archipelago lies Flores Island, a long, narrow land of high mountains, precipitous cliffs, and deep ravines.
The island is home to some remarkable creatures, including the <a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/biology/homo-floresiensis-rat-bones/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Flores giant rat</span></span></span></a>, a tree-dwelling beast that can grow 70 centimeters nose-to-tail.
Also found on Flores is the world’s largest lizard, the <a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/biology/island-dwarfism/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Komodo dragon</span></span></span></a>, a venomous carnivore that can attain a length of more than 3 meters.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">In ancient times, Flores Island once had the now-extinct pygmy <i>Stegodon</i>, elephant-like creatures no larger than a cow.
But my concern is with an even more remarkable and even less expected animal—or perhaps two animals of very similar kinds.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/app/uploads/2023/04/02L_Musee-des-Confluences.
jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">The meter-tall <i>Homo floresiensis</i> (front) lived at the same time as early <i>Homo sapiens</i> (left) and <i>Homo neanderthalensis</i> (right).
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Robert Deyrail/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">One is an extremely small-bodied fossil human <a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/archaeology/ancient-human-species/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">named <i>Homo floresiensis</i></span></span></span></a>, known from remains found in 2003 at Liang Bua in western Flores.
Standing little more than a meter tall—the height of a 2–3-year-old child—<a href="https://humanorigins.
si.
edu/evidence/human-fossils/species/homo-floresiensis"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">the tiny species</span></span></span></a> quickly became nicknamed “the hobbit,” after the J.
R.
R.
Tolkien characters.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Paleoanthropologists described the hobbit’s skeletal features as “archaic,” comparable in some ways to australopiths who lived 2–4 million years ago.
Yet <i>H.
floresiensis </i>lived as recently as 50,000 years ago.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">The other humanlike creature, which for convenience I call “ape-man,” has yet to be scientifically identified.
 [1] But one group that populates Flores Island, a people called Lio, claims these creatures are alive—if not well—in isolated sections of their mountainous territory.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">IN THEIR OWN LANGUAGE</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">, the Lio name these ape-men <i>lai ho’a</i>.
They describe them as small—in fact, about the same size as <i>H.
floresiensis</i>—upright walking and hairy.
Individual Lio offer credible accounts of <i>lai ho’a</i> they have seen, including eyewitness encounters dating from the 1960s to the 2010s.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Archaeological dates suggest <i>H.
floresiensis</i> had been living on the island since around 100,000 years ago.
The species’ ancestors may have arrived much earlier.
But because dates are available only from a single site, when <i>H.
floresiensis</i> disappeared—or even if it disappeared—is not known.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">There’s reason to believe Flores Island ape-men could be present-day descendants of <i>H.
floresiensis</i>.
If so, it could mean that this species still shares Flores Island with modern humans.
On the other hand, the humanlike creatures Lio speak of could be purely imaginary.
Which solution is best supported by the evidence is what interests me.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">LIVING SOME 300–400 KILOMETERS</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> east of the site where <i>H.
floresiensis</i> was discovered, Lio occupy one of the island’s most mountainous regions—rugged country by any standard.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Not long ago, Lio people mainly practiced slash-and-burn (or swidden) cultivation.
In highland gardens carved out of mountain forests, they planted maize, rice, millet, and other cereals, and a variety of vegetables and tubers.
In the 1930s and 1940s, part of the population began cultivating rice in permanent irrigated fields located in lower-lying places.
About the same time, some Lio also abandoned highland villages to build settlements nearer to paddy fields.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/app/uploads/2023/04/03_Rice-paddies-near-homes.
jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:blue"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Today many Lio reside in villages near irrigated rice paddies that they farm.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Hermes Images/AGF/Universal Images Group/Getty Images</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Even so, many farmers still plant highland gardens and reside at higher elevations, often a considerable distance from roads and other modern institutions.
During the 20th-century, Lio forests shrank due to human activities.
Yet the highest mountains remain covered in jungle.
It is mainly in these regions that the Lio say people, very occasionally, encounter ape-men.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">THE FLORES ISLAND</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> ape-man is a figure I’ve reconstructed from the statements of numerous Lio people.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">I’ve never seen an ape-man, and partly for this reason some readers may want to dismiss any resemblance between these creatures and apparently long-extinct hominins as mere coincidence.
One purpose of my research is to question such dismissal.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">I can immediately discount the possibility that the ape-man simply reflects local familiarity with the scientific discovery and reconstruction of <i>H.
floresiensis</i>.
I was lucky.
I first recorded physical descriptions of the Lio ape-man in July 2003.
That was over two months before paleoanthropologists came across the remains of <i>H.
floresiensis</i> in September of 2003 and well over a year before the discovery was announced to the public.
Even after that time, very few Flores Islanders learned much about the discovery.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">This doesn’t mean ape-men exist as flesh-and-blood creatures—as opposed to imaginary beings existing only in people’s minds.
But actually demonstrating that ape-men are imaginary is no easy task.
One might attempt to show that the thing’s existence contradicts the laws of physics or principles of biological evolution.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">To be sure, some Lio reports <i>do</i> defy basic science.
Fantastic claims assert ape-men can “disappear” or even “fly.
” Yet many Lio accounts adhere to a thoroughly naturalistic depiction.
If such realistically represented things do not exist, there remains the question of why people think they do—indeed, why some give seemingly credible accounts of ape-man sightings.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">MY STUDIES ON</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> Flores Island have been <a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/culture/what-is-cultural-anthropology/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">broadly ethnographic</span></span></span></a>, meaning that I investigate how people organize their social and spiritual lives, what they believe, and what they consider valid knowledge.
Like all ethnographers, I’ve pursued this research by living with local people over long periods of time and conversing with them in languages in which they are fluent.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">My first stint of fieldwork on Flores Island was in 1984.
Since then, I’ve returned to Flores 19 times, typically spending two to three months in the field.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">As an anthropologist, I’m fully aware that verbal evidence of any kind can be fabricated, exaggerated, or simply mistaken.
I’m mainly talking, of course, about statements by people who claim to have seen Flores Island ape-men.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Yet one can evaluate putative sightings by considering the physical setting and people’s descriptions (do they sound like another animal—a monkey, say—or a tree stump or rock, or indeed, something dreamt?).
One can also assess the personality, character, and social status of witnesses, including what interest they may have in representing something in a particular way.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/app/uploads/2023/04/04R_Gado.
jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Some Lio, like ritual specialist Goda, might have personal or professional reasons for claiming to see ape-man.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">For this reason, I place less reliance on accounts by people of a supernatural bent, most notably dealers in magically powerful ape-men body parts or substances and “people of power” (<i>ata bhisa</i>) or “people of skill (or knowledge)” (<i>ata mbe’o</i>).
 [2] These people serve as spiritual healers, magicians, and sorcerers.
They might have a personal—one might also say a professional—interest in claiming experience of things unfamiliar to others.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">The most valuable ape-men reports are those where two or more people claimed to have seen the same thing simultaneously; I recorded several such accounts.
But even in these instances, all witnesses could have been mistaken or misremembered what they saw.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">How can I be sure <i>anything</i> I heard reflects a natural creature corresponding to a scientifically unknown species? The short answer is I can’t.
Even so, several considerations reduce my uncertainty—and may do the same for readers.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">I BEGIN WITH DELIBERATE</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> deception.
Researchers can find dishonest individuals in any field setting.
There are ways of identifying people, with reference to personal traits, social position, and interests, who are inclined to deceive or exaggerate (such as the aforementioned sorcerers).
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">But there are also reasons to believe that much of what people tell any anthropologist is accurate—at least in people’s honest understanding.
Most of what people said about Flores Island ape-men agreed with what others said.
And where accounts diverged, it was usually possible to find a reason why.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Also, deception and fabrication require effort.
It’s far easier for people to tell the truth (as they see it) or simply say they don’t know—surely, the best way to get rid of a troublesome anthropologist.
Not only that, fabrication requires a motive.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Sometimes, people may tell mistruths to convey what they think an inquirer wants to hear.
But it’s unclear why Lio might have thought I was soliciting naturalistic depictions of ape-men.
It’s more likely that some people were inclined to stress supernatural aspects.
For people knew I was also interested in such things as local spirits, witches, and magical beliefs and practices.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Mistruths might be told to pull someone’s leg.
A person in the U.
S.
or Canada might tell someone they’d seen Bigfoot to fool them.
But this wouldn’t work among the Lio.
For Lio regard their ape-men as real although rare animals, whose existence no one disputes.
A North American parallel might be telling a person you’d seen, say, a wolverine, an animal even experienced outdoorspeople rarely encounter in the wild; even if the claim was false, it would hardly constitute leg-pulling.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Lio were familiar with ape-men long before the arrival of missionaries or other agents of colonialism.
What’s more, secondary-school curricula have little if anything to say about paleoanthropology or human evolution.
So far as I could discover, textbooks—or, for that matter, any of the few books that are locally available—do not include illustrations of non–<i>Homo sapiens</i> human ancestors.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Educated Florenese Catholics, including Indonesian priests, are openly critical of Darwinian evolution, and ordinary Lio villagers are barely aware of it.
Their Indigenous cosmology contains nothing comparable to a view of present-day humans or animals having gradually evolved from physically different ancestors.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">There’s no reason to suppose that their view of Flores Island ape-men has in any way been shaped by the discovery of <i>H.
floresiensis</i>.
Having no stake in and little knowledge of paleoanthropology, Lio would have no reason to doubt that a small bipedal animal combining features of humans and apes could exist in their territory.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Segoe UI Symbol&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="color:black">✽</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-transform:uppercase">FOR LIO, FLORES ISLAND</span></span></span></span><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"> ape-men are part of the local environment as much as any other rare creature, such as Komodo dragons.
Unlike Bigfoot believers, no Lio ever goes looking for ape-men.
Lio have no motive—financial, social, or otherwise—for finding an ape-man specimen.
And because they are barely aware of outside scientific views—or any view that claims such creatures do not exist—they have no ideological interest in proving any “scientific establishment” wrong.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/app/uploads/2023/04/05_Jata.
jpg" target="_blank"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:blue"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none"></span></span></span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Jata stands where she reportedly saw an ape-man cross a stream on Flores Island.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><i><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></i></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">As this should suggest, Lio are also less biased than scientists who reject the possibility of non–<i>H.
sapiens</i> bipedal apes surviving to the present.
Some academics and nonacademics dismiss any knowledge of the natural world that has not received the seal of scientific approval.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">But these skeptics should wonder why Lio think Flores Island ape-men exist.
They ought to give the Lio people a fair hearing.
I have, in part because of the arrestingly naturalistic way people describe <i>lai ho’a</i>.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">If accepted as plausible accounts of real creatures, what Lio say presents a challenge to biology and paleoanthropology.
If not, another challenge arises: to explain why people subscribe to the empirical existence of entities with little or no basis in observable reality.
</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black"><a href="https://www.
sapiens.
org/authors/gregory-forth/"><span style="color:black"><span style="text-decoration:none"><span style="text-underline:none">Gregory Forth</span></span></span></a></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> <span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:7.
5pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Rosart&quot;,serif"><span style="color:black">Open Bio</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br />.

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