[Paper] Craniometrics Reveal “Two Layers” of Prehistoric Human Dispersal in Eastern Eurasia
via Nature Scientific Reports, 05 Feb 2019: Analysis of skulls from archaeological sites in Southeast and East Asia support a ...
Skeleton of a person or animal’s head.
via Nature Scientific Reports, 05 Feb 2019: Analysis of skulls from archaeological sites in Southeast and East Asia support a ...
New paper in PLOS One describing mandibles from the Niah Caves - these were excavated by the Harrissons in 1957. ...
via The Star, 08 April 2018: Muzium Negara hosts China’s The Peking Man Exhibition: Zhoukoudian Heritage Site, a touring exhibit ...
via Malaysian Digest, 06 January 2018: FURTHER studies and researches are being conducted to determine if the first human civilisation ...
via Khmer Times, 30 October 2017: Two human skulls more than 3,000 years old have gone on display in a ...
via AFP-New Straits Times, 26 October 2017: A 6,000-year-old skull found in Papua New Guinea is likely the world’s oldest-known ...
A study of the Deep Skull from Niah has some new interpretations - female, not male;and likely originating from East ...
A new paper published in the Journal of Human Evolution compares the cranial structures of modern humans and homo florsiensis ...
Bones from a 3,000-year-old cemetery in Vanuatu suggest that the earliest humans in the pacific were more similar to that ...
Australian and Vietnamese archaeologists working in Central Vietnam have uncovered three burials, presumed to date to the Neolithic. Excavations at ...
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