A paywalled paper published three days ago (Feb. 24, 2026) in Nature (Yang, SX., Martinón-Torres, M. & Petraglia, M. Palaeoanthropological evidence from China is changing the picture of hominin evolutionary history. Nat Ecol Evol (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-026-02983-w) reports on the recent research, datings and findings in China that have upended conventional beliefs about the evolution of our species.
"Abstract
Recent palaeoanthropological discoveries in China indicate that eastern Asia had an important role in the evolutionary history of the genus Homo over the past 2 million years. New taxonomic proposals have been made to re-group archaic human fossils, including those considered to be Denisovans, as Homo juluensis and Homo longi. The hypothesis that the affinities of Yunxian 2, dated to about 1 million years ago, also infer an early divergence of the Homo sapiens lineage further underscores China’s pivotal role in global evolutionary narratives. Here we explore key biological and cultural evidence emerging from the Chinese record and its evolutionary implications, raising questions about the relationships between ‘transitional’ clades and their differing adaptive capabilities. Rather than an evolutionary cul-de-sac, China now appears as a dynamic evolutionary crossroad where multiple Homo lineages may have arisen, interacted and adapted to shifting environments. The growing fossil and genetic evidence point to a diversity of populations whose demographic history and gene flow exchange helped to shape the broader mosaic of our species."
In my next two posts I will look into two very papers that report two remarkable findings: an earlier age for the first Out Of Africa event that saw Homo erectus enter Asia (or possibly, even an australopithecine), and also a much older date for erectus' arrival in China. Plus two other papers mentioning sites that are possibly over 2 million years old in China.
I am not a Sinophile, and not because I dislike the Chinese people or their culture, quite the opposite. I have visited China many times before I retired as I worked for several years with companies there, visited customers, traveled the country extensively. I spent vacations there, with my wife, and I also have Chinese friends. I enjoy the food, the rich history, the diverse culture, and its natural sights. I am reluctant to embrace China because I am at odds with the system that governs that great nation. The Chinese Communist party, allied with the People's Liberation Army, is a one-party system that perpetuates a caste, an elite, living in luxury, backed by force that has, for the past 77 years destroyed and ignored the human rights (as we see them with our Western eyes) of its people, jailed opposition, suppressed free press, and supported dictators (like the ones who govern Iran, North Korea, and Russia). Then there are the territorial claims in the South China Sea (Spratly Islands), and its heavy handed attitude with South Korea, and Japan. Add to that the official silence over the origin of the Covid-19 pandemic, and how it has gradually eroded the rights agreed upon with Britain for Hong Kong ("One country, two systems", for 50 years) and is slowly but surely imposing its totalitarian views and police-state grip there. The increasingly aggressive stance with Taiwan, the Republic of China, a thriving democracy, is also troubling.
Nevertheless, I am glad that research is uncovering new findings in China. This will help us understand how our ancestors peopled Asia, America, and the interplay between the different branches of hominins.
Patagonian Monsters - Cryptozoology, Myths & legends in Patagonia Copyright 2009-2026 by Austin Whittall ©





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