Classifications

Filters:
Family
Subfamily
Tribe
Subtribe
Genus
Species
SitesAge MinAge Max
Paranthropus robustus215000002000000
Homo habilis216500002310000
Homo denisovans250000300000
Praeanthropus anamensis239000004200000
Australopithecus africanus223000003000000
Hominini111620000
Ardipithecus ramidus136000005333000
Homo ergaster116300001780000
Homo floresiensis150000190000
Homo antecessor1780000990000

What are Classifications and Taxonomies?

Zoological taxonomical classification is the system that humans have applied to the living world by assigning a hierarchical category to living organisms. As humans, we also apply that system to ourselves and the evolutionary predecessors to modern humans. Classifications in the context of the Gignos cataog are the categories of family, genus, species and subspecies that are applied to prehistoric archaeological specimens.

Debate

Classifications of prehistoric humans are often controversial topics that garner decades of debate and are frequently upended as new research is brought to light. At Gignos we will do our best to represent the current state of the known classifications and their hierarchies as best as we understand them. When we are unsure about a specific relationship of a classification to a specimen or site we will relate multiple classifications to those entities.[1]

Sources

Cited References

  1. 1.

This page was last edited on October 20, 2022 at 16:10:11 UTC