Maba Man
Maba Man (simplified Chinese: 马坝人; traditional Chinese: 馬壩人; pinyin: mǎbà-rén) is a pre-modern hominin whose remains were discovered in 1958 in caves near the town called Maba, near Shaoguan city in the north part of Guangdong province, China.[1][2]

Characteristics
Farmers found an ancient Maba cranium in 1958, near a Chinese village named Maba. Maba Man was labeled an intermediate in form between Homo erectus and H. sapiens; the remains are referred by many authorities to archaic H. sapiens or to an Asian extension of H. heidelbergensis.[3] As the scientists did more research on the Maba cranium, they found that the fossils consisted of a skull cap and parts of the right upper face, with parts of the nose also still attached. The scientists saw a connection with Homo erectus because the brow ridges were pronounced, forming an arch over each eye and the bones of the brain-case were low and thick. Even so, the brain was apparently larger than that of H. erectus, though precise measurement of cranial capacity is not possible, as the skull's base is incomplete.[3]
References
- Welsh, Jennifer (21 November 2011). "Ancient Human's Head Trauma Points to Foul Play". Live Science. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
- Wu R. K. et Pang R.-C. Fossil human skull of early Paleoanthropic stage found at Mapa, Shaoquan, Kwantung Province. Vertebrata PalAsiatica, 1959, t.3, №1, pp.176-182.
- "Maba cranium | hominin fossil". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-05-23.