The evidence that Homo floresiensis was a reasonably intelligent early species of small-brained human is exciting but sketchy. Anthropologists have found only one near-complete skull of the species, and a debate rages over whether this individual—a roughly 30-year-old, three-foot-tall female—was typical. One thing is clear, however: her brain was closer in size to a chimpanzee's than to a modern human's. Below, examine three endocasts, or approximate models of the brain, made of each of the three species. Click and drag on the images to rotate them. (Requires QuickTime plugin)
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© | Created April 2005 |