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To understand what we mean today by
"Homo erectus", some history of paleoanthropological thought is needed.
The first early human fossil found outside of Europe was the Trinil 2 fossil
skullcap from the Solo River in Java, pictured to the right. The fossil
was placed in the species Pithecanthropus erectus by its discoverer
Eugene Dubois. Almost 40 individuals have been recovered from Java to this
day, roughly equivalent to the number of fossils found at the caves of Choukoutien
in China. The Choukoutien fossils found were originally assigned the species
name Sinanthropus pekinensis. It was not until the 1950's that Ernst
Mayr proposed that all of the specimens from these two roughly contemporaneous
locales, along with others localities from Europe and Africa, represented
a single species, Homo erectus. Since the 1950's, however, the early
African populations of what Mayr termed Homo erectus have once again
been split into a separate species Homo ergaster.
Homo erectus exhibits many features particular to the species,
including a long skull shaped with thick cranial walls. The back of the
skull is marked with a protruberance known as a transverse torus. Over
the eyes is a large and prominent browridge, or supraorbital torus, which
joins the rest of the frontal bone at a depression called the sulcus.
Cranial capacities of Homo erectus average around 1000cc, which
is far greater than earlier australopiths and even early Homo.
The dentition of Homo erectus is nearly identical to modern humans,
although the cheek teeth do remain larger, and the mandible is generally
more robust.
The species Homo erectus is thought to have diverged from Homo
ergaster populations roughly 1.6 million years ago, and then spread
into Asia. It was believed that Homo erectus disappeared as other
populations of archaic Homo evolved roughly 400,000 years ago.
Evidently, this is not the case. Recent studies into the complicated stratigraphy
of the Java Homo erectus sites have revealed some surprising information.
Researchers have dated the deposits thought to contain the fossils of
H. erectus near the Solo River in Java to only 50,000 years ago.
This would mean that at least one population of Homo erectus in
Java was a contemporary of modern humans (Homo sapiens).
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