More Evidence Emerges That "Hobbits" Were A Separate Species

Friday, January 11, 2013 - 11:30 in Paleontology & Archaeology

Homo floresiensis The Lian Bua cave on the island of Flores, Indonesia, where the remains of Homo floresiensis were found in 2003. Wikimedia Commons It's all in the wrist. While film buffs have been arguing over the need to make The Hobbit into three different films, anthropologists have been busy debating the origins of real hobbits, whose remains were discovered in Indonesia only a decade ago. In 2003, researchers uncovered 18,000-year-old bones of a woman with a skull a third of the size of a human's on the island of Flores, Indonesia. They subsequently found more remains belonging to up to nine similarly pint-sized prehistoric creatures. Nicknamed after the the J.R.R. Tolkien characters, they stood some 3 and a half feet tall. The origin of these hobbits has been controversial, as claiming they are a different kind of hominid closer to Homo erectus than Homo sapiens throws a...

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