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  • Specimens

    Showing 1 - 1 out of 1

    • CCH1 (Callao Cave Hominin)

      CCH1 or Callao Cave Hominin 1 is the right third metatarsal of a Homo luzonensis, a small-bodied ancient hominin discovered in Callao Cave in the Philippines [1][2][3].

  • Classifications

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    • Homo luzonensis

      Homo luzonensis, also locally called "Ubag" after a mythical caveman, is an extinct, possibly pygmy, species of archaic human from the Late Pleistocene of Luzon, the Philippines. Their remains, teeth and phalanges, are known only from Callao Cave in the northern part of the island dating to before 50,000 years ago. They were initially identified as belonging to modern humans in 2010, but in 2019, after the discovery of more specimens, they were placed into a new species based on the presence of a wide range of traits similar to modern humans as well as to Australopithecus and early Homo.

      Their ancestors, who may have been Asian H. erectus or some other even earlier Homo, would have needed to have made a sea crossing of several miles at minimum to reach the island. Human presence on Luzon dates to at latest 771,000 to 631,000 years ago. The inhabitants of the cave dragged in mainly Philippine deer carcasses, and used tools for butchering.[1]

  • Sites

    Showing 1 - 2 out of 2

    • Callao Cave

      Callao Cave is a limestone cave located in the municipality of Peñablanca in the Philippines. The cave has been intermittently occupied since the Neolithic period up to the Late Pleistocene. It is known for the discovery of the Homo luzonensis a small-bodied hominin that lived on Luzon island from 50,000 to 67,000 years ago [1][2].

  • News

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