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Published by Korean Studies on August 13, 2025
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September 4, 2025 Homo juluensis: A Pan-Eastern Asian Middle Pleistocene Hominin

THE CENTER FOR KOREAN STUDIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAIʻI AT MĀNOA PRESENTS:

Homo juluensis 

A Pan-Eastern Asian Middle Pleistocene Hominin

Date: Thursday, September 4, 2025 at 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Venue: Center for Korean Studies Auditorium
Co-sponsored: Department of Anthropology, School of Pacific and Asian Studies, and the Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology Program

 

Middle Pleistocene (~780,000-~127,000 years BP) fossils that cannot be easily assigned to Homo erectus, H. neanderthalensis, or H. sapiens have traditionally been lumped into a generic category like “archaic H. sapiens” (or H. heidelbergensis). How to classify these fossils has been the subject of intense debate over the past several decades, a debate that is sometimes referred to simply as “The Muddle in the Middle”. What is becoming increasingly clear is that multiple species of hominins were present across Eurasia and Africa during this time period. Here, I introduce Homo juluensis, a new species of hominin that was present across eastern Asia that appeared as far north as southern Siberia, as far south as Laos, and even present in high altitudes (Qinghai-Tibet). In addition, gaps in the paleoanthropological record (e.g., North Korea) will also be discussed as there is a good chance different types of hominins, including H. juluensis, were present in the region.

  

Speaker:

Christopher J. Bae is the Director of the Center for Korean Studies and a Professor of Anthropology at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa. Bae has spent the past three decades researching the paleoanthropological record of eastern Asia, particularly Korea, China, and Japan. He takes a multidisciplinary approach to his research working closely with paleontologists, archaeologists, geochronologists, and paleoclimatologists. Bae is the recipient of the UH BOR Research Excellence Award and his research was recently acknowledged as one of the top ten UH Manoa stories for 2024.

 

The event is free and open to all. For further information, including information regarding disability access, telephone the Center for Korean Studies at 808-956-7041. This event is in part supported by the Academy of Korean Studies Strategic Research Institute Program (AKS-2020-SRI-2200001).

The University of Hawai‘i is an equal opportunity institution.

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