Hualong Cave

Coordinates: 30°03′48″N 116°33′55″E / 30.0634°N 116.5654°E / 30.0634; 116.5654
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Hualong Cave
Hualongdong
LocationDongzhi County, Anhui, People's Republic of China
Coordinates30°03′48″N 116°33′55″E / 30.0634°N 116.5654°E / 30.0634; 116.5654
Depth3.1–4.8 m
Length93 m

Hualong Cave (

giant pandas. The most notable fossils are those of the Hualongdong people,[4] including Homo erectus (dubbed Dongzhi Man) described in 2014,[5] and that of a 300,000-year-old archaic human discovered in 2019.[6]

Stone tool

Hualong Cave shows the lifestyle of humans in the Paleolithic Age. Bone tools were used for cutting animals but not for hunting. More than 100 stone tools have been discovered. These stone tools were made from

siliceous rocks. Scrapers were the most abundant tools.[7]

Animal fossil

More than 40 species of mammalian fossils have been discovered from Hualong Cave. The majority of them are

even-toed ungulates. Only few rodents can be identified. Important specimens include Ailuropoda, Arctonyx, Bubalus, Sinomegaceros, stegodon, giant tapir, and giant pandas. The occurrence of Sinomegaceros in the cave is remarked as the most southern in China.[3]

Human fossil

Dongzhi Man

Popularized as Dongzhi Man, a human fossil described in 2014 from Hualong Cave is considered as among the most well-preserved Homo erectus specimens.[5] It was discovered in 2006 along with stone artifacts and animal fossils during the first excavation. It consisted of two skull fragments and one separated (lower molar) teeth. The skull fragments were believed to be from the same individual.[8] It is different from other fossils of the same species including Peking Man found in China. The teeth surfaces (enamel-dentine junctions) are much simpler and the cusps are sharper.[9]

Other Fossils

Recent human family tree
According to Ni et al. 2021
Denisovans are most closely related to Neanderthals according to nDNA and ancient protein analyses by Chen et al. 2019.[11]
)

In 2019 a discovery of 16 human fossils was announced which were estimated to be about 300,000 (275,000–331,000) years old.[2] The fossil assemblage included 8 cranial elements, seven isolated teeth, three femoral diaphyseal pieces, and major portions of an adolescent skull (designated HLD 6, HLD for Hualongdong).

References

  1. .
  2. ^ a b "Chinese researchers discover 300,000-year-old ancient human fossils". Chinadaily.com.cn. Xinhua. 24 May 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  3. ^ .
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  5. ^ a b "Well-Preserved Homo Erectus Skull Discovered in China". Archaeology. 20 November 2015. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  6. ^ "300,000-Year-Old Fossils Discovered in China". Archaeology. 24 May 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  7. .
  8. ^ Gong, X; Zheng, L; Xing, S; et al. (2014). "Ānhuī Dōngzhì Huálóng Dòng chūtǔ de rénlèi huàshí" 安徽东至华龙洞出土的人类化石 [Human fossils found from Hualong cave, Dongzhi county, Anhui Province]. Rénlèixué xuébào / Acta Anthropologica Sinica (in Chinese). 33 (4): 428–436.
  9. PMID 29391445
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