Gigantopithecus blacki
From: http://www.wynja.com/arch/gigantopithecus.html
According to Ciochon et al.
(1990), Gigantopithecus blacki was 10 feet tall and weighed 1,200
pounds. This is speculative, since it is with some uncertainty that
one reconstructs such a massive creature from a few jaw bones and
teeth, however many. The way they arrived at this picture was first
to estimate the size of the head from the jaw, and then to use a
head/body ratio of 1:6.5 in order to determine the body size. For
comparison they cite a head/body ratio of 1:8 for the Australopithecus
afarensis specimen known as 'Lucy'. The more conservative ratio for
Gigantopithecus was arrived at out of consideration of the massive
jaw as an adaptation to the mastication of fibrous plant matter (probably
bamboo). Gigantopithecus was probably proportionally a markedly big
jawed creature. For the head shape they based their assumptions on
the orangutan, since evolutionarily they place Gigantopithecus on
the same line as the orangutan, finding a common ancestor for them
both in Sivapithecus. However, the orangutan could not serve as a
model for the body, since it is unlikely that a 1,200 pound ape would
be as arboreal. Therefore they chose the largest primates known,
the gorilla and the extinct giant baboon Theropithecus oswaldi, as
their models for the body. They gave Gigantopithecus an intermembral
index 108 (gorilla at 120 + Theropithecus at 95 divide by 2 = 108
rounded up - very scientific!) (Ciochon et al., 1990).
Since Ciochon (et al, 1990) with aid of Bill Munn (Hollywood monster
maker/dinosaur reflesher) were interested as well in building a
very impressive life size model we would be wise to consider the
dimensions with some caution, and note that they represent the
biggest Gigantopithecus that could be built rationalized from the
actual remains, and that it is a male. Females may have been half
the size of the males, since the teeth fall markedly into two distinct
size groupings (Ciochon et al., 1990), as I will discuss later
in terms of sexual dimorphism and what inferences have been drawn.
Elwyn L. Simons and Peter C. Ettel (1970) paint a somewhat different
picture. They trace Gigantopithecus back to a dryopithicine origin
and their corresponding reconstruction is essentially a giant gorilla,
9 feet tall, weighing 600 pounds. It is not nearly as attractive
as the giant orangutan/gorilla cross created by Ciochon et al.
and Bill Munn (1990)
 
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