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This blog's purpose is to inform you about the cultural studies, research and science world. Nelumbo is generally focused on issues related to archaeology, history, and culture in Southeast Asia. It's also a place for posts and ads about seminars or conferences, on research in social sciences (particularly in South-East Asia), on scientific and cultural events, publications, calls for papers, jop posts, etc.
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18 août 2010

[Article] Ancient bone find may change human history.

August 03, 2010 | Jakarta Globe | by Cecil Morella
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A 67,000-year-old foot bone found in the Philippines
Archaeologists have found a foot bone that could prove the Philippines was first settled by humans 67,000 years ago, thousands of years earlier than previously thought, the National Museum said Tuesday.
The bone, found in an extensive cave network, predates the 47,000-year-old Tabon Man that is previously known as the first human to have lived in the country, said Taj Vitales, a researcher with the museum's archaeology section.
"This would make it the oldest human remains ever found in the Philippines," Vitales told AFP.
A team of archaeologists from the University of the Philippines and the National Museum dug up the third metatarsal bone of the foot in 2007 in the Callao caves near Penablanca, about 335 kilometres (210 miles) north of Manila.
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