Cranial analysis of hobbit suggests no relation to modern humans
A new paper published in the Journal of Human Evolution compares the cranial structures of modern humans and homo florsiensis ...
Homo floresienses is the name for a dimunitive hominid species that lived in Flores, Indonesia, some 17,000 years ago.
See also: Mike Morwood, Liang Bua
A new paper published in the Journal of Human Evolution compares the cranial structures of modern humans and homo florsiensis ...
Darren Curnoe argues that recent archaeological finds from East Asia and Southeast Asia hint at fundamental changes in our understanding ...
The discovery of stone tools from Sulawesi date to 118,000 years ago - possibly by the so-called hobbits - predate ...
A new study on the tooth morphology of Homo floresiensis suggests that they may be not be a group deformed ...
The Liang Bua site in Flores has seen a jump in popularity by foreign tourists due to the discovery of ...
A new paper in PNAS tears down the arguments made last year in the same journal about the Hobbit being ...
Another story commemorating the 10th anniversary of the Hobbit discovery; Nature interviews the key researchers behind the find. The discovery ...
The BBC has an article about the discovery of the Hobbit, announced 10 years ago, and recaps what the find ...
There seems to be more than meets the eye with the latest paper in PNAS on the 'hobbit' as a ...
Two articles on the New York Times and the Daily Mail about the recent papers in PNAS suggesting that the ...
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