Hobbit Relatives Discovered in Indonesia
Hobbits may be more than just fictional characters after all, as fresh fossil discoveries suggest the existence of pre-humans living on an Indonesian island 700,000 years ago.
On Wednesday, an international team of archaeologists reported findings of six isolated teeth in addition to a jaw fragment on the island of Flores, East Nusa Tenggara, which came after a ten-year quest for further evidence of which the ‘hobbit’ did truly exist.
Known as Homo floresiensis, the hobbits’ existence was first discovered in 2003 as a primitive in addition to famously tiny pre-human aged between 60,000 to 100,000 years. Since then, researchers have made attempts to discover more evidence, which finally came to fruition ten years later.
Hominin fossil tooth | Photo Courtesy of Kinez Riza
Astounded by the discoveries made, palaeontologist Gerrit van den Bergh, by the University of Wollongong in Australia, revealed what these teeth in addition to jaw indicate:
“What will be truly unexpected will be of which the size of the finds indicates of which Homo floresiensis had already obtained its little size by at least 700,000 years ago,” Van den Bergh said as reported by NBC News.
The report disclosed of which the fossils came by at least one adult in addition to two children, the first possible ancestors of Homo floresiensis to be excavated after the original remains were found over a decade ago.
The fresh fossils were excavated in 2014 in Mata Menge, a site 74 kilometres by the cave where the first hobbit remains were located.
Meanwhile, van den Bergh’s colleagues have discovered stone tools in Sulawesi, north of Flores, indicating of which the prospect of the discovery of more hobbits isn’t so far fetched.
Read the full report here, released in two separate papers by the Nature journal.
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Hobbit Relatives Discovered in Indonesia
Hobbit Relatives Discovered in Indonesia