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Skull Discovered in 1933 Sheds Light on Ancient Human Species

Skull Discovered in 1933 Sheds Light on Ancient Human Species

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Two new studies published in Science and Cell have shed light on a mysterious skull found in China, and in the process have provided insight into the lives of a previously little-known ancient human.
The 'Dragon Man' skull was found in Harbin City, China, during an excavation in 1933. The skull, which was terrifically well-preserved, was kept by the discovering archaeologist because he feared authorities would confiscate the skull. In 2018, shortly before he died, the archaeologist donated the skull for analysis. The Dragon Man's skull was much larger than modern humans, bearing an expanded brain volume as well as deep, prominent eyebrow ridges, a flat face, a wide nose, and no chin. Scientists estimated that the person lived roughly 146,000 years ago.
After studying molecules from a molar in the skull, Qiaomei Fu, a geneticist at Beijing's Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, determined that it likely belonged to a Denisovan. Denisovans have long been a mystery to scientists, as they only had the pinkie bone of an adolescent, which was discovered in 2010 and rumor genes fitfully present in modern humans available to study. Though DNA has long shown that Denisovans were interbred with Neandertals and modern humans, with as much as five percent of their genetic composition existing in people from Melanesia and other Southeast Asian regions, this is the first Denisovan skull which has been discovered.
'After 15 years, we give the Denisovan a face,' Fu told National Geographic. 'It's really a special feeling, I feel really happy.' In their study published in Cell, the researchers added: "This is the first detailed morphological blueprint for Denisovan populations.'
The discovery redefines the history of human evolution in South Asia, with researchers now able to investigate how the Denisovans' contributions to ancient culture still reverberate in the modern day. "Having a well-preserved skull like this one allows us to compare the Denisovans to many more different specimens found in very different places,' Bence Viola, an archaeologist not involved with the study, told New Scientist. 'We can finally think about their adaptations to climate, mobility, and even social behavior.'
Skull Discovered in 1933 Sheds Light on Ancient Human Species first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 20, 2025

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Mysterious 'dragon man' skull found in the 1930s finally identified
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Ancient ‘Dragon Man' DNA reveals mysterious human relative
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Yahoo

time5 hours ago

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Ancient ‘Dragon Man' DNA reveals mysterious human relative

It's the end of a nearly 100-year-old mystery. Using DNA-analysis, scientists have identified an ancient human relative nicknamed "Dragon Man", new research showed. It all started with a 146,000-year-old skull found by a labourer in the northern Chinese city of Harbin in 1933. The man left his treasure at the bottom of a well, where it remained hidden until his family uncovered the fossil in 2018 and donated it to science. Experts initially failed to match the cranium with any known prehistoric human species. In 2021, they dubbed the discovery Homo longi or 'Dragon Man', a name derived from from Heilongjiang, or Black Dragon River, the province where the it was found. Now, scientists have managed to extract genetic material and proteins by scrapping tooth plaque from the fossil's mouth, an unusual technique that proved successful. The findings of the research were published in Cell and Science Analysis confirmed the skull belongs to the Denisovans, an extinct species of archaic human beings found across Asia. The species was first identified in 2010 thanks to DNA tests on small, fossilised bone fragments, but no complete Denisovan skull had ever been found. Related 4,000-year-old tablets found in Iraq reveal ancient red tape Archaeologists discover oldest section of China's Great Wall, dating back nearly 3,000 years The new discovery will make it easier for experts to identify further Denisovan fossils and seen the species finally assigned a scientific name. The new research might also give clues regarding the species' appearance. The Harbin skull is large, with strong and low brow ridges, similar to Neanderthals and modern humans. Qiaomei Fu, a professor at the Institute of Paleontology and Palaeoanthropology in Beijing which led the new research wrote: "the finding that the human DNA of the Harbin specimen is better preserved in the dental calculus than in the dense bones, including the petrous bone, suggests that dental calculus may be a more valuable source for investigating DNA in Middle Pleistocene hominins."

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