
Map showing Xuchang in Henan where a human skull dating 80,000 to 100,000 years was unearthed, according to reports in the state media Wednesday.
BEIJING (AFP) - An almost complete human skull dating back 80,000 to 100,000 years was unearthed in central China, state media reported Wednesday.
The skull, consisting of 16 pieces, was dug out last month after two years of excavation at a site in Xuchang in Henan province, the China Daily said.
The pieces were fossilised because they were buried near the mouth of a spring whose water had a high calcium content, the China Daily said.
It is rare to find a nearly complete skull of that age.
Besides the skull, more than 30,000 animal fossils and stone and bone artifacts were found in the past two years in an area of 260 square metres (2,800 square feet).
The oldest human fossil found in China so far was a tooth unearthed in 1965 in Yuanmou county in the southwestern province of Yunnan that dated back 1.7 million years, said Wu Xinzhi, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
1 response so far ↓
wil // January 25, 2008 at 7:11 pm
Speaking of fossils, what did they do with Mao?
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