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File photo for reference only

 

In a groundbreaking discovery, a prehistoric human skeleton, estimated to be over 29,000 years old, has been uncovered in a limestone cave at Khao Sam Roi Yot National Park, Prachuap Khiri Khan, Thailand. This find positions itself as potentially the oldest human remains ever found in the country.

 

Phanombootra Chantarachot, Director-General of the Fine Arts Department, and Chidchanok Sukmongkol, Deputy Director-General of the Department of National Parks, revealed exciting details about the discovery. Alongside the skeleton, ancient paintings adorn the cave walls, forming a rich tapestry of human history.

 

These cave paintings were initially discovered in 2017 by archaeologists from the Fine Arts Department. The limestone cave hosts five chambers, with three featuring vivid wall paintings, suggesting a once-bustling human settlement.

 

 

Excavations in one chamber unveiled a treasure trove of ancient artifacts, including shells, plant seeds, and animal bones. Among these relics lay human remains, believed to be of a young boy between 6 and 8 years old. Experts identified the remains as those of a male from a tooth found with the bones.

 

Five selected specimens were sent to Beta Analytic Inc. in the U.S. The accelerator mass spectrometer (AMS) testing confirmed human habitation in the area approximately 29,000 years ago.

 

If verified, this discovery may reshape our understanding of human migration, indicating that during the Palaeolithic period, the Gulf of Thailand was possibly a vast land mass extending towards Indonesia, serving as an overland route for early humans, reported The Thaiger.

 

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-- 2025-02-24

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, KannikaP said:

What is the photo of please, for refence only. 

It is Sam Roi Yot  national park

you know you can use goole lens or goolge image  to search for a place using an image.

Posted
2 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

If verified, this discovery may reshape our understanding of human migration,

 

The oldest Homo sapiens remains in Asia are from Tam Pà Ling Cave in Laos, dating back 86,000–77,000 years...   (thats a 13 day walk from Sam Roi Yot  national park)...  

 

Then there is the Moh Khieo Cave in Krabi province, with a female skeleton estimated to be around 25,000 years old, which a mere dash in geological time scale, particularly when considering the Palaeolithic period lasted from 2.5 million years ago to 10,000 years ago... (timing is commonly debated).

 

I don't like to be cynical about scientific (in this case archeological) discoveries, but Thai officials do love to over egg their pudding with such announcements.

 

The oldest Homo sapiens remains discovered in Morocco are dated to between 280,000 and 350,000 years old. 

 

 

 

https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/news/2023/june/fossils-reveal-early-modern-humans-southeast-asia-77000-years-ago.html

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Posted
13 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

don't like to be cynical about scientific (in this case archeological) discoveries, but Thai officials do love to over egg their pudding with such announcements.

Very interesting article.

As usual you have twisted it into a Thai bashing.

There is a big chip on your shoulder.

Which “Thai official” are you referring to? Got a name?

Posted
14 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

The oldest Homo sapiens remains in Asia are from Tam Pà Ling Cave in Laos, dating back 86,000–77,000 years...   (thats a 13 day walk from Sam Roi Yot  national park)...  

 

Sure, but that was a Lao skeleton.

Doesn't count.

Posted
10 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:

Very interesting article.

As usual you have twisted it into a Thai bashing.

There is a big chip on your shoulder.

Which “Thai official” are you referring to? Got a name?

He's smarter than you.

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Posted
21 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:

Very interesting article.

As usual you have twisted it into a Thai bashing.

 

Well, not specifically a Thai-bash, more specifically a ridiculing of the manner in which Thai Authority figures enjoy claiming credit with such announcements under false conditions...   Great work for those who did the work, I'm sure they're more aware of the Laos and the Krabi discoveries and that the Palaeolithic period was millions of years and the geomorphological understanding cannot possibly be altered by observations within a few thousand years.

 

.... Do you remember the Thai announcements about the 'cure for aids'...   'how about the cure for Covid'...   both announcements also made my Thai officials jumping the gun...  

 

 

21 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:

There is a big chip on your shoulder.

 

Nope...  No chip at all... I love it here in Thailand, I have many many very close Thai friends. 

But, I'm also a realist and do not view Thailand through the same blinkered myopic lens as you.... 

 

Thailand is a place which for me is a huge net positive, Most people are fully capable of recognising both the flaws amongst the positives....   you'll call them a Thai-basher when seeing a critical post because you are clearly a Thai-apologist... in your impossibly unrealistic narative that Thai's are never wrong...    in the normal world Thai's, just like everyone else are normal and have characters who when left unchecked in a patriarchal society dominated by face and power are left making announcements such as those I've ridiculed in this thread. 

 

21 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:

Which “Thai official” are you referring to? Got a name?

 

I've got two for you...  Phanombootra Chantarachot, and Chidchanok Sukmongkol....

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Posted
24 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

I've got two for you...  Phanombootra Chantarachot, and Chidchanok Sukmongkol....

Who said that this find was the oldest find ever in Thailand.

And it is.

Not sure why you need to carry on. 
Maybe you didn’t read it properly? Triggered by the headline perhaps?

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