A Chinese research team report in the journal "The Innovation" that a skull discovered in Harbin in 1933, nicknamed "Dragon Man", belongs to a previously undiscovered species of early humans. The team says the species, which they named "Homo longi", lived in East Asia about 146,000 years ago before going extinct.
A Chinese research team reports in the journal "The Innovation" that a skull discovered in Harbin in 1933, nicknamed "Dragon Man", belongs to a previously undiscovered species of early humans. The team saysthat the species, which they named "Homo longi", lived in East Asia about 146,000 years ago before going extinct.
Chinese archaelogists reports in the journal "The Innovation" that a skull discovered in Harbin,Manchukuo,in 1933, nicknamed "Dragon Man", belongs to a previously undiscovered species of early humansdatingback146,000yearsago. The team named the species "Homo longi" in their paper.
Chinese archaelogists report in the journal "The Innovation" that a skull discovered in Harbin, Manchukuo, in 1933, nicknamed "Dragon Man", belongs to a previously undiscovered species of early humans dating back 146,000 years ago. The team named the species "Homo longi" in their paper.
Chinese archaelogists report in the journal "The Innovation" that a skull discovered in Harbin in1933byaManchukuo NationalRailwaybridge,knownas"Homolongi"or"Dragon Man", belongs to a previously undiscovered species of early humans dating back 146,000 years ago.
Chinese archaeologists report in the journal "The Innovation" that a skull discovered in Harbin in 1933 by a Manchukuo National Railway bridge, known as "Homo longi" or "Dragon Man", belongs to a previously undiscovered species of early humans dating back 146,000 years ago.