1. CHINESE PALEOANTHROPOLOGY.
- Author
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Chang, K. C.
- Subjects
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PEKING man , *PALEONTOLOGICAL excavations , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains , *HOMO erectus , *FOSSIL hominids , *PREHISTORIC anthropology , *FOSSIL primates , *PALEOANTHROPOLOGY - Abstract
This article examines the important results of palaeoanthropological study in China during the nineteen-seventies. Palaeoanthropology refers to the study of human and cultural history during the Pleistocene and its immediately preceding and succeeding periods. In the first decades of the study of early man in China, the study of Peking Man, otherwise known as Homo erectus pekinensis, was dominated by Western scientists. In an excavation led by Swedish geologist Otto Zdansky at Locality 1 of Chou-k'ou-tien from 1921 to 1923, C. Wiman of Uppsala recognized two human teeth among the excavated fossils. When J. G. Andersson, another Swedish geologist, announced this find in Peking in 1926, A. W. Grabau, a German geologist teaching at Peking University, proposed the name Peking Man.
- Published
- 1977