I participated in a drawing secret santa this year, so here's my take on a dragon fighter–Mr. Maximilliam–for Augusto Ladeira!
https://bsky.app/profile/augustolad.bsky.social
This was a lot of fun :)
I participated in a drawing secret santa this year, so here's my take on a dragon fighter–Mr. Maximilliam–for Augusto Ladeira!
https://bsky.app/profile/augustolad.bsky.social
This was a lot of fun :)
«A badly crushed cranium..that once defied classification→now shaking up human family tree.
Scientists..reconstructed the squashed skull, thought 2 B 1M yrs old, its features suggest fossil belonged 2 same lineage as striking specimen called “#DragonMan” & the #Denisovans, enigmatic, recently discovered population of prehistoric humans w/ murky origins. The skull’s age & categorization as early Denisovan ancestor would mean the group originatd much earlier than thought»
From the blog: The #Denisovans got a face! - Turns out, it’s #DragonMan’s ...
https://trowelandpen.com/2025/06/20/the-denisovans-got-a-face-turns-out-its-dragon-mans
L'identificazione come Denisova del cranio di Harbin e le differenze riscontrate rispetto a frammenti trovati altrove rafforza l'ipotesi che questa specie "sorella" dei Neanderthal, che popolava un'area enorme, si sia differenziata al proprio interno.
Ciò forse permetterà di classificare alcuni crani dalle caratteristiche inusuali trovati in Cina.
L’Uomo Dragone, a.k.a. Homo Longii, ha trovato finalmente la sua collocazione nell’intricata vegetazione del nostro albero genealogico.
Il cranio trovato ad Harbin (Cina nordorientale) non appartiene a una specie estinta a sé, come per anni sostenuto da studiosi cinesi, ma ci restituisce le fattezze di un Denisova vissuto circa 146.000 anni fa.
Sinora dei Denisova presenti dalla Siberia all’Indocina e l’Oceania sapevamo tanto da pochi frammenti ossei. Mancava un olotipo.
The dragon's out of the bag:
#aDNA gives 146,000 y/o unusual sized and shaped skull of #HomoLongi (a.k.a. #DragonMan), originally found in 1933 in #China and rediscovered in 2018, away as actually: #Denisovan!
https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/human-evolution/ancient-dragon-man-skull-from-china-isnt-what-we-thought via @LiveScience