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Registros recuperados: 5
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A re-examination of the Kedung Brubus mandible Naturalis
Tobias, P.V..
During a visit to the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie in Leiden in July 1964, Dr D. A. Hooijer kindly allowed me to re-examine the mandibular fragment which had been discovered by Eugène Dubois on 24 November 1890 at Kedung Brubus, a fossil locality in the Kendeng Beds in Central Java (Dubois, 1891a, 1891b, 1924a, 1924b). As a result of a possibly important new point which emerged during my examination of the specimen, Dr Hooijer urged me to place my observations and their implications on record. It is the purpose of this short paper to do so. BRIEF HISTORICAL SYNOPSIS In his original two notes of 1891, Dubois clearly recognized the fragment as belonging to "Homo spec. indet." He drew attention to the poor chin development and the curious flattening...
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: 42.21; 42.85.
Ano: 1966 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/318714
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Eocene crabs (Crustacea, Brachyura) from Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles Naturalis
Collins, J.H.S.; Donovan, S.K..
Recently discovered crabs from the Middle to Upper Eocene of northern Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles, include well-preserved carapaces of Montezumella rutteni Van Straelen, originally described from an incomplete holotype. The more comprehensive description of this species provided herein includes documentation of the first attributable left cheliped of Montezumella. From the same locality, Ocalina sublevis sp. nov. considerably extends the known geographic range of this genus. Both of these Tethyan decapod genera apparently migrated west from the Mediterranean region during the Eocene. Despite these new determinations, decapod crustaceans remain poorly known from the Eocene of the Antillean islands. Additionally, Callianassa pustulosa Withers from the...
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: Crustacea; Decapoda; Systematics; Eocene; Bonaire; Netherlands Antilles; 42.85.
Ano: 2005 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/210098
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Prehistoric teeth of man and of the orang-utan from Central Sumatra, with notes on the fossil orang-utan from Java and Southern China Naturalis
Hooyer, D.A..
... there is one point which has delayed the right conception and understanding of the evolutionary process for a long time. This was the idea that the older the morphological age of the human form is, the more it must approach the living anthropoids. This conclusion did not take into account that the big apes, too, must have undergone essential changes during the same period of time in which man evolved. WEIDENREICH, Apes, Giants, and Man, Chicago, 1946, p. 11/12. CONTENTS Introduction . . . 175 Homo sapiens L. subsp . . . 182 Pongo pygmaeus palaeosumatrensis nov. subsp . . . 187 Incisors . . . 188 Canini . . . 199 Premolars . . . 208 Molars . . . 229 Milk dentition . . . 264 The prehistoric orang-utan population . . . 269 Pongo pygmaeus (Hoppius) subsp....
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: 38.22; 42.85.
Ano: 1948 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/319405
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The Dubois collection: a new look at an old collection Naturalis
Vos, J. de.
One of the most exciting episodes of palaeoanthropology was the find of the first transitional form, the Pithecanthropus erectus, by the Dutchman Eugène Dubois in Java during 1891-1892. The history of Dubois and his finds of the molar, skullcap and femur, forming his transitional form, are described. Besides the human remains, Dubois made a large collection of vertebrate fossils, mostly of mammals, now united in the so-called Dubois Collection. This collection played an important role in unravelling the biostratigraphy and chronostratigraphy of Java. Questions, such as from where were those mammals coming, when did Homo erectus arrive in Java, and when did it become extinct, and when did Homo sapiens reach Java, are discussed.
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: Dubois; Pithecanthropus erectus; Homo erectus; Homo sapiens; Java; 42.85.
Ano: 2004 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/215474
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The evolutionary significance of the Wajak skulls Naturalis
Storm, P..
Ever since their description by Dubois (1920, 1922) the Wajak skulls Java) have played an important role in the discussions on the evolution of modern humans in Australasia. Because of the robust morphology of the skull, Wajak Man was seen as a link between Pleistocene hominids from Java (Solo) and Recent Australian Aborigines. However, for a long time hardly any attention has been paid to the contents of the other boxes with human, faunal and cultural remains, as collected by Dubois around 1890. Because a satisfactory description of the Wajak fossils has so far been lacking and the archaeological context of the Wajak site has so far been ignored, the evolutionary position of Wajak Man necessarily remained unclear. The present study suggests that the...
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor Palavras-chave: 42.85.
Ano: 1995 URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/317406
Registros recuperados: 5
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