It was, perhaps, inevitable that Homo floresiensis, the three-foot-tall species of primitive human discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores, would come to be widely known as "hobbits". After all, ...
FLINT, MI -- The Longway Planetarium is holding a lecture on the Hubble Telescope May 23 titled, "There and Back Again: An Astronomer's Tale." Guest lecturer Dr. Rajib Ganguly of the University of ...
The lecture on a newly discovered species of "little people" will coincide with the release of the first Hobbit film. Photo / Supplied The lecture on a newly discovered species of "little people" will ...
Homo floresiensis likely stood about 3’6″, making this prehistoric human roughly the average height of one of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Hobbits. For years, Flores Man has been referred to by the nickname ...
You have reached your maximum number of saved items. Remove items from your saved list to add more. It was, perhaps, inevitable that Homo floresiensis, the one-metre-tall species of primitive human ...
It was, perhaps, inevitable that , the metre-tall species of primitive human discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores, would come to be widely known as "hobbits". After all, like JRR Tolkien's ...
It was, perhaps, inevitable that Homo floresiensis, the 1m tall species of primitive human discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores, would come to be widely known as “hobbits.” After all, like ...
The “hobbit” stood 39 inches tall, weighed only 55 pounds and she brought paleoanthropologist Peter Brown the world’s attention when he discovered her bones in Indonesia in 2003. Brown, a professor of ...