Background Charles Darwin had argued that
humanity evolved in Africa, because this is where
great apes like
gorillas and
chimpanzees lived. Though Darwin's claims have since been vindicated by the
fossil record, they were proposed without any fossil evidence. Other scientific authorities disagreed with him, like
Charles Lyell, a
geologist, and
Alfred Russel Wallace, who thought of a similar
theory of evolution around the same time as Darwin. Because both Lyell and Wallace believed that
humans were more closely related to gibbons or another great ape (the
orangutans), they identified
Southeast Asia as the cradle of humanity because this is where these apes lived. Dutch anatomist
Eugène Dubois favored the latter theory, and sought to confirm it.
Trinil fossils In October 1887, Dubois abandoned his academic career and left for the
Dutch East Indies (present-day
Indonesia) to look for the fossilized ancestor of modern man. Having received no funding from the Dutch government for his eccentric endeavorsince no one at the time had ever found an early human fossil while looking for ithe joined the Dutch East Indies Army as a military surgeon. Because of his work duties, it was only in July 1888 that he began to
excavate caves in
Sumatra. Having quickly found abundant fossils of large mammals, Dubois was relieved of his military duties (March 1889), and the colonial government assigned two engineers and fifty convicts to help him with his excavations. After he failed to find the fossils he was looking for on Sumatra, he moved on to Java in 1890. Again assisted by convict laborers and two army corporals, Dubois began searching along the
Solo River near
Trinil in August 1891. His team soon excavated a
molar (Trinil 1) and a
skullcap (Trinil 2). Its characteristics were a long
cranium with a
sagittal keel and heavy browridge. Dubois first gave them the name
Anthropopithecus ("man-ape"), as the chimpanzee was sometimes known at the time. He chose this name because a similar tooth found in the
Siwalik Hills in India in 1878 had been named
Anthropopithecus, and because Dubois first assessed the cranium to have been about , closer to apes than to humans. In August 1892, a year later, Dubois's team found a long
femur (thighbone) shaped like a human one, suggesting that its owner had stood upright. The femur bone was found 50 feet (approx. 15 meters) from the original find one year earlier. Believing that the three fossils belonged to a single individual, "probably a very aged female", Dubois renamed the specimen
Anthropopithecus erectus. Only in late 1892, when he determined that the cranium measured about , did Dubois consider that his specimen was a
transitional form between apes and humans. In 1894, he thus renamed it
Pithecanthropus erectus ("upright ape-man"), borrowing the genus name
Pithecanthropus from
Ernst Haeckel, who had coined it a few years earlier to refer to a supposed "missing link" between apes and humans. This specimen has also been known as Pithecanthropus 1.
Comparisons with Peking Man In 1927, Canadian
Davidson Black identified two fossilized teeth he had found in
Zhoukoudian near
Beijing as belonging to an ancient human, and named his specimen
Sinanthropus pekinensis, now better known as
Peking Man. In December 1929, the first of several skullcaps was found on the same site, and it appeared similar but slightly larger than Java Man.
Franz Weidenreich, who replaced Black in China after the latter's death in 1933, argued that
Sinanthropus was also a transitional fossil between apes and humans, and was in fact so similar to Java's
Pithecanthropus that they should both belong to the family
Hominidae. Eugène Dubois categorically refused to entertain this possibility, dismissing Peking Man as a kind of
Neanderthal, closer to humans than the
Pithecanthropus, and insisting that Pithecanthropus belonged to its own
superfamily, the Pithecanthropoidea.
Other discoveries on Java After the discovery of Java Man, Berlin-born paleontologist
G. H. R. von Koenigswald recovered several other early human fossils in Java. Between 1931 and 1933 von Koenigswald discovered fossils of
Solo Man from sites along the
Bengawan Solo River on
Java, including several skullcaps and cranial fragments. In 1936, von Koenigswald discovered a juvenile skullcap known as the
Mojokerto child in
East Java. Considering the Mojokerto child skull cap to be closely related to humans, von Koenigswald wanted to name it
Pithecanthropus modjokertensis (after Dubois's specimen), but Dubois protested that Pithecanthropus was not a human but an "ape-man". Von Koenigswald also made several discoveries in
Sangiran, Central Java, where more fossils of early humans were discovered between 1936 and 1941. Among the discoveries was
a skullcap of similar size to that found by Dubois at the Trinil 2 site. Von Koenigswald's discoveries in
Sangiran convinced him that all these skulls belonged to
early humans. Dubois again refused to acknowledge the similarity. Ralph von Koenigswald and Franz Weidenreich compared the fossils from Java and Zhoukoudian and concluded that Java Man and Peking Man were closely related. Dubois died in 1940, still refusing to recognize their conclusion, and official reports remain critical of the Sangiran site's poor presentation and interpretation. ==Early interpretations==