MAN’S ANCESTRY
t FURTHER CLUES 1 DISCOVERIES NEAR PEKING c s r THEORY REINFORCED s j PEKING, Nov. 24. Two new skulls of the famous Sinanthropus Pekinensis type of men who are estimated to have lived half a million years ago have been discovered at Choukoutien, 30 miles south-west or Peking, by workers from the Rockefeller Institute. The director of the research laboratory, Dr. Franz Weidenreich, is reconstructing the fragments into two fairly complete skulls which, he believes, represent a woman aged 50 and a man aged 40. He claims that they leave no doubt of the validity of the theory that man is descended from anthropoid-like hominids, and believes that they are contemporaneous with the famous Pithecanthropus Erectus found in Java 40 years ago, which it was long believed was an ape, but which Dr. Wiedenreich now states was o*f the Sinanthropus type, on the basis of comparison with the new skulls. The complete lack of any limb bones or skull bases in the world’s largest collection of human fossils, all from Choukoutien, leads Dr. Weidenreich to believe that the Peking man was a head-hunting cannibal who smashed ; the skulls of his victims near the bases to obtain the brains, which primitive man considered were strengthening. t.
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Bibliographic details
Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 280, 26 November 1936, Page 7
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208MAN’S ANCESTRY Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 280, 26 November 1936, Page 7
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