Massive cranium from Harbin in northeastern China establishes a new Middle Pleistocene human lineage: The Innovation
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Newly Discovered Human Species Dragon Man May Replace Neanderthals As Our Closest Relative
Newly Discovered Human Species Dragon Man May Replace Neanderthals As Our Closest Relative
Morphological and morphometric analyses of a late Middle Pleistocene hominin mandible from Hualongdong, China - ScienceDirect
In Search of Dragon Man: A Prehistoric Investigation: It was hidden in a well for 85 years: what can the Harbin skull tell us about our origins? (From the beginning) - Kindle
A Aproximação Facial do Homo longi (Harbin, China ~148.000 AP) — documentação OrtogOnLineMag #7
Evolution of cranial capacity revisited: A view from the late Middle Pleistocene cranium from Xujiayao, China - ScienceDirect
Geochemical provenancing and direct dating of the Harbin archaic human cranium - ScienceDirect
Evolution of cranial capacity revisited: A view from the late Middle Pleistocene cranium from Xujiayao, China - ScienceDirect
PDF) Late Middle Pleistocene Harbin cranium represents a new Homo species
Early presence of Homo sapiens in Southeast Asia by 86–68 kyr at Tam Pà Ling, Northern Laos
Dragon Man' skull may help oust Neandertals as our closest relative
Newly discovered human species named Homo longi or Dragon Man
Newly-Discovered “Dragon Man” Rewrites Human Family Tree - Modern Sciences
This 1,46,000-year-old 'Dragon Man' skull changes what we know about human evolution
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