enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Giant human skeletons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_human_skeletons

    Hrdlička blamed the reports of giant skeletons on the "will to believe" coupled with "amateur anthropologists" who were unfamiliar with human anatomy. In 2014 an internet story began circulating which claimed that the Smithsonian Institution had custody of giant skeletons but they destroyed "thousands of giant skeletons" in the early 20th century.

  3. Teutobochus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teutobochus

    The French scholar Peiresc also demonstrated that such bones belong to elephants. [1] Theutobochus mentioned by Robert Plot in his Natural history of Oxfordshire, 1677, along with other purported giant skeletons. [5] Much later, the zoologist Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville analyzed the bones and concluded they came from a mastodon.

  4. Gashadokuro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gashadokuro

    The Gashadokuro is a spirit that takes the form of a giant skeleton made of the skulls of people who died in the battlefield or of starvation/famine (while the corpse becomes a gashadokuro, the spirit becomes a separate yōkai, known as hidarugami.), and is 10 or more meters tall. Only the eyes protrude, and some sources describe them as ...

  5. Java Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Man

    In response to critics who refused to accept that Java Man was a "missing link", in 1932 Dubois published a paper arguing that the Trinil bones looked like those of a "giant gibbon". [32] Dubois's use of the phrase has been widely misinterpreted as a retraction, [ 33 ] but it was intended an argument to support his claim that Pithecanthropus ...

  6. Kennewick Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennewick_Man

    The cranium was fully intact including all of its teeth from the time of death. [10] All major bones were found except the sternum and a few in the hands and feet. [11] After further study, Chatters concluded it was "a male of late middle age (40–55 years), and tall (170 to 176 cm, 5′7″ to 5′9″), and was fairly muscular with a slender build". [10]

  7. Charles Byrne (giant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Byrne_(giant)

    The skeleton of the 7 ft 7 in (2.31 m) tall Byrne displayed at the Royal College of Surgeons of England in London. Charles Byrne (probable real name: Charles O'Brien; [1] [2] 1761 – 1 June 1783), or "The Irish Giant", was a man regarded as a curiosity or freak in London in the 1780s for his large stature.

  8. Grimaldi man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grimaldi_Man

    Grimaldi man is the name formerly given to two human skeletons of the Upper Paleolithic discovered in Italy in 1901. The remains are now recognized as representing two individuals, and are dated to possibly being of the same age as the five Cro-Magnon skeletons discovered by French palaeontologist Louis Lartet in 1868, and classified as part of ...

  9. Zhoukoudian Peking Man Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhoukoudian_Peking_Man_Site

    Zhoukoudian Peking Man Site (周口店北京人遗址), also romanized as Choukoutien, is a cave system in suburban Fangshan District, Beijing.It has yielded many archaeological discoveries, including one of the first specimens of Homo erectus (Homo erectus pekinensis), dubbed Peking Man, and a fine assemblage of bones of the giant short-faced hyena Pachycrocuta brevirostris.