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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: Iwan Kurniawan Clear advanced filters
  • Stylistic similarities of stone tools recovered from 800,000-year-old deposits in Flores with stone tools associated with the much later Homo floresiensis suggest continuity — calling into question claims that the brain of Homo floresiensis was too small to have accommodated technology.

    • Adam Brumm
    • Fachroel Aziz
    • Richard Fullagar
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 441, P: 624-628
  • How small-bodied hominins in southeast Asia became so small ~60 thousand years ago is unclear. Here, the authors present hominin remains dated to 700 thousand years ago with even smaller body size, suggesting early evolution and maintained small size in the region.’

    • Yousuke Kaifu
    • Iwan Kurniawan
    • Gerrit D. van den Bergh
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-13
  • Evidence for hominin activity on Flores, Indonesia, has been thought to go back at least 800,000 years, as shown by fission-track dating at Mata Menge in the Soa Basin. However, new research at another locality in the Soa Basin uses the more accurate technique of 40Ar/39Ar dating to show that hominins were living on Flores at least a million years ago.

    • Adam Brumm
    • Gitte M. Jensen
    • Michael Storey
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 464, P: 748-752
  • Stratigraphic, chronological, environmental and faunal context are provided to the newly discovered fossils of hominins that lived in the So’a Basin in Flores, Indonesia, 700,000 years ago; the stone tools recovered with the fossils are similar to those associated with the much younger Homo floresiensis from Flores, discovered in Liang Bua to the west.

    • Adam Brumm
    • Gerrit D. van den Bergh
    • Michael J. Morwood
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 534, P: 249-253
  • Remains of what appears to be Homo floresiensis have now been found at another site in Flores in Indonesia; these 700,000-year-old fossils are older and slightly smaller than the first fossils identified as Homo floresiensis.

    • Gerrit D. van den Bergh
    • Yousuke Kaifu
    • Michael J. Morwood
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 534, P: 245-248
  • New excavations in Sulawesi, where in situ stone artefacts associated with fossil remains of megafauna have been recovered from stratified deposits between 200,000 and 100,000 years ago, suggest that Sulawesi was host to a long-established population of archaic hominins.

    • Gerrit D. van den Bergh
    • Bo Li
    • Michael J. Morwood
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 529, P: 208-211