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  1. 8 de feb. de 2021 · DNA analysis of teeth and other fossilized remains from five caves in China has suggested that it was unlikely early modern humans were in China as early as 100,000 years ago.

  2. 3 de ene. de 2024 · By 1.66 million years ago, early humans of the genus Homo who reached eastern Asia were able to disperse over a wide area that extended from at least 40°N (Nihewan basin) to 7°S (Java, Indonesia), across a habitat range from temperate grassland to tropical woodland and possibly forest.

  3. 14 de oct. de 2015 · Finding early humans in southern China was not, by itself, an anthropological earthquake. Multiple migration routes can account for how homo sapiens first found their way there, including a...

  4. 14 de oct. de 2015 · A collection of 47 unequivocally modern human teeth from a cave in southern China shows that modern humans were in the region at least 80,000 years ago, and possibly as long as 120,000 years ago...

  5. Ancient humans appear to have reached northwestern China about 2.1 million years ago, and they lived there for hundreds of thousands of years, according to a new study published Wednesday in...

  6. 25 de jun. de 2021 · The Harbin cranium was discovered in 1933 by an anonymous Chinese man when a bridge was built over the Songhua River in Harbin, according to one of the studies in The Innovation. At the time,...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Peking_ManPeking Man - Wikipedia

    Peking Man ( Homo erectus pekinensis) is a subspecies of H. erectus which inhabited the Zhoukoudian cave site in modern northern China during the Chibanian. The first fossil, a tooth, was discovered in 1921, and the Zhoukoudian Cave has since then become the most productive H. erectus site in the world.