Publication | Closed Access
A mandible from the Middle Pleistocene Hexian site and its significance in relation to the variability of Asian <i>Homo erectus</i>
37
Citations
48
References
2017
Year
Mandibular and dental features indicate that the Hexian mandible and teeth differ from northern Chinese H. erectus and European Middle Pleistocene hominins, but show some affinities with the Early Pleistocene specimens from Africa (Homo ergaster) and Java (H. erectus), as well as the Middle-Late Pleistocene mandible from Penghu, Taiwan. Compared to contemporaneous continental Asian hominin populations, the Hexian fossils may represent the survival of a primitive hominin, with more primitive morphologies than other contemporaneous or some chronologically older Asian hominin specimens.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1