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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Peking Man

Wikipedia

 
Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Peking Man<br/>StatusFossil
Taxobox_image | image = Image:Zhoukoudian Museum July2004.jpg|300px|Zhoukoudian Peking Man Site - the Museum (taken in July 2004). At the centre: what Peking Man looked like. | caption = Zhoukoudian Peking Man Site - the Museum (taken in July 2004).<br>At the centre: what Peking Man looked like.
Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink
Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = Animalia
Taxobox_phylum_entry | taxon = Chordata
Taxobox_subphylum_entry | taxon = Vertebrata
Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = Mammalia
Taxobox_ordo_entry | taxon = Primates
Taxobox_familia_entry | taxon = Hominidae
Taxobox_genus_entry | taxon = Homo (genus)|Homo
Taxobox_species_entry | taxon = Homo erectus|H. erectus
Taxobox_subspecies_entry | taxon = H. e. pekinensis
Taxobox_end_placement
Taxobox_section_binomial_simple | color = pink | binomial_name = Homo erectus pekinensis
Taxobox_end

Peking Man (sometimes now called Beijing Man), also called Sinanthropus pekinensis (currently Homo erectus pekinensis), is an example of Homo erectus. The remains were first discovered in 1923-27 during excavations at Zhoukoudian (Choukoutien) near Beijing (Peking), China.

Excavations had begun at Zhoukoudian in 1921, investigating a number of caves in the limestone there. The remains of around fifteen prehistoric individuals were uncovered, with the first fragments being exposed in 1923. The finds have been dated from roughly 250,000-400,000 years ago.

The pre-war work was directed by Otto Zdansky, then Davidson Black and later by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and Franz Weidenreich. The first specimens of H. erectus had been found in Java (island)|Java in 1891 by Eugene Dubois, with the Java Man initially being named Pithecanthropus|Pithecanthropus erectus but later transferred to the genus Homo (genus)|Homo.

All the pre-war finds at Zhoukoudian were lost at sea during transit to the US, forcing subsequent researchers to rely on casts and existing writings from the original discoverers.

Contiguous finds of animal remains and evidence of fire and tool use and manufacture were used to support H. erectus being the first "faber" or tool-worker. This interpretation was challenged in the 1980s by Louis Binford and others.

The Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian was listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1987.

de:Peking-Mensch
ja:北京原人
zh:北京人

Category:early hominids
Category:World Heritage Sites in China

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Peking Man".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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