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The Last Survivors: How Homo Erectus in Java Defied ExtinctionNew research has revealed that Homo erectus in Java persisted far longer than previously believed, possibly overlapping with ...
Archaeological finds off the coast of Java, Indonesia, provide insight into the world of Homo erectus, 140,000 years ago.
Bone fragments from Homo erectus have emerged that shed new light on humans' ancestry in Southeast Asia from the last Ice Age ...
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IFLScience on MSN140,000-Year-Old Homo Erectus Remains Discovered Alongside Other Animals In Drowned SundalandSand dredging off the coast of Java has recovered more than 6,000 bones, including two fragments of skulls of the early ...
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ScienceAlert on MSNUnderwater Fossils Surface to Reveal a Lost World of Archaic HumansAn artificial island of sand dredged from Indonesia's seafloor has accidentally revealed evidence of a long-lost sunken world ...
According to Discover Magazine, the fossil remains were found after a marine sand extraction project in the Madura Strait, ...
Fragments of a Homo erectus skull were among deposits of vertebrate fossils found when the Indonesian seafloor was being ...
Archaeologists have recovered 140,000-year-old Homo erectus bones from an extinct human species on the ocean floor in ...
However, a pair of fossilized skull fragments recently found off the Javanese coast are helping experts recontextualize the ...
THE bones of a long-extinct human ancestor have been dredged up from the seafloor, just off the coast of what is now known as ...
an archaic human species whose roughly 900,000-year-old remains were previously found at the same site, according to the research. Rather, the facial fragments belong to Homo affinis erectus ...
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