Dali Man

The Dali Man (Chinese: 大荔人) is a extinct human relative that was found in China in 1978. Its exact placement in the human genus is argued over by scientists, some theories include it being a later member of homo erectus, an early modern human, or a part of its own species Homo daliensis.[1][2] The exact dating of the Dali Man is also subject to debate.

Dali Skull
Dali Man Skull, Replica.jpg
Common nameDali Skull
Specieslate Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis, or early Homo sapiens
Age260±20 ka
Place discoveredDali County, Shaanxi, China
Date discovered1978
Discovered byLiu Shuntang

Taxonomy

The skull has a large brow-ridge that curves over each eye; unlike the straight brow-ridges of the Peking Man.[3] During fossilization the upper jaw was damaged and dislocated upwards, making the face look shorter then expected.[4]

Reference

  1. Wu, X. Z.. A well-preserved cranium of an archaic type of early Homo sapiens from Dali, China. Scientia Sinica 24 (4) (1981). p. 530–41.
  2. Wu, X. Z.. A well-preserved cranium of an archaic type of early Homo sapiens from Dali, China. Scientia Sinica 24 (4) (1981). p. 530–41.
  3. Wu, X. Z.. A well-preserved cranium of an archaic type of early Homo sapiens from Dali, China. Scientia Sinica 24 (4) (1981). p. 530–41.
  4. Wu R. (1988): The reconstruction of the fossil human skull from Jinniushan, Yinkou, Liaoning Province and its main features. Acta Anthropologica Sinica no 7: pp 97–101.