You mean the Hobbit’s a clown now?
In an off-tangent study of the diminutive bones from Flores, Indonesia, it turns out that the hobbit had flat, clown-like ...
Homo floresienses is the name for a dimunitive hominid species that lived in Flores, Indonesia, some 17,000 years ago.
See also: Mike Morwood, Liang Bua
In an off-tangent study of the diminutive bones from Flores, Indonesia, it turns out that the hobbit had flat, clown-like ...
What do Dungeons & Dragons have in common with ancient Indonesian ruins, Malay dances and explosion of the Toba volcano? ...
The National Public Radio's Science Friday programme has a 12-minute interview with Lee Berger, the principal investigator of the Palau ...
Following the suggestion from last week's controversial paper about the nature of the Flores Hobbits comes a new discovery that ...
This week's been abuzz with another Hobbit story again, this time saying that the diminutive bones belong to malnourished humans ...
In this edition of Rojak... Johny Setiawan takes a walk through the Indonesian National Museum and reflects on the shared ...
A newly-defined disease is speculated a possible explanation of the hobbit: the disease causes decreased stature and growth, but also ...
This Christmas edition of the Wednesday Rojak brings us to Cambodia, Thailand and Indonesia for some ancient temples, royal architecture, ...
Duncan Graham, a writer based in Surabaya, gives his take on the book The Discovery of the Hobbit by Mike ...
Earlier this year, a study by Dean Falk hoped to put to rest the homo floresiensis controversy by comparing casts ...
Stay connected with the latest breakthroughs, research, and events from across Southeast Asia’s archaeology scene. Sign up today for exclusive weekly updates, trusted by over 2,000 subscribers.