For decades, the Mojokerto child, whose gender is unknown, was considered
non-datable, because the exact site where it was found could not be clearly determined. By 1985, four different locations had been proposed as the possible site of discovery. It was also unclear whether the fossil had been
excavated or found on the surface, making dating difficult even if the site itself became certain. In the early 1990s,
geochronologist Garniss Curtis and
paleontologist Carl C. Swisher III used the
argon–argon dating method to propose a date of 1.81 ± 0.04
Ma for the fossil, that is, 1.81 million years ago, with a margin of error of plus or minus 40,000 years. Their rock sample "
hornblende grains from volcanic
pumice that appeared to match the filling of the skull" came from a site shown to them in 1990 by
Teuku Jacob, an Indonesian
paleoanthropologist who had studied under Ralph von Koenigswald. Swisher and Curtis announced their findings in a paper that was published in
Science magazine in 1994. The fossil's unexpectedly old age was announced in at least 221 newspapers including on the front page of
The New York Times and prompted cover stories in
Discover,
New Scientist, and
Time magazines. Swisher and Curtis's conclusion was hotly debated, because it meant that the Mojokerto child was as old as the oldest known specimens of African
Homo ergaster (also called
Homo erectus sensu lato), suggesting that
Homo erectus could have
left Africa much earlier than thought, or even evolved in Southeast Asia rather than Africa as most scientists had assumed. Few critics questioned the dating method, but several objected that, considering the uncertainty surrounding the fossil's discovery site, it was unclear whether the rock samples used for dating had been taken from the right location. In 2003, a paper published by a team led by archeologist
Mike Morwood presented 1.49 ± 0.13 Ma as the latest possible date, based on "
fission-track dating of single
zircon grains". Morwood argued that the rock samples Curtis and Swisher dated came from a
pumice bed located below the one above which the Mojokerto skullcap was found. The
geological horizon immediately under the fossil Morwood calls it "Pumice Horizon 5" dates back to 1.49 Ma, whereas the one just above "Pumice Horizon 6" dates from 1.43 ± 0.1 Ma. In 2006, Australian
archeologist Frank Huffman used pictures and
fieldnotes from the 1930s to identify the exact site of the excavation and confirmed that the fossil was indeed found between the two layers that Morwood had dated. Morwood's and Huffman's conclusions have been widely accepted. ==References==