The Stony Brook University

Human Evolution Series

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TBI celebrates fifty years of Zinjanthropus with symposium in NYC

2009 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the discovery of Zinjanthropus in Olduvai Gorge by Mary Leakey, and The Turkana Basin Institute marked the event with a public symposium on September ...

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Hobbits in the Haystack: Homo floresiensis and Human Evolution

  • DATE: April 21, 2009
  • LOCATION: Staller Center for the Arts, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York
  • TOPIC: Homo floresiensis, the "hobbit" fossils
  • WATCH: A webcast of the recent conference will be available soon.

EVENT NEWS

 

The Turkana Basin Institute recently convened the Seventh Stony Brook Human Evolution Symposium, held on April 21, 2009 at Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY.
Image: fossil jaws of Homo floresiensis © Djuna Ivereigh/ARKENAS.
Image: fossil jaws of Homo floresiensis © Djuna Ivereigh/ARKENAS.

This public symposium focused on a prehistoric hominin that has recently gained international celebrity status, the enigmatic Homo floresiensis. Since the announcement of this taxon in 2004, Homo floresiensis has emerged as one of the most fascinating and perplexing twists to the story of human evolution in recent history. Dated to only 17,000 years ago, these “hobbits” possessed a shocking number of primitive morphologies more reminiscent of earlier Homo erectus, or even Australopithecus, than modern humans.

The symposium offered a unique opportunity for the researchers currently in the process of describing and analyzing the Homo floresiensis remains to update the general public on their thoughts on the profound implications of this material for understanding the nature and tempo of human evolution.