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Thai Cave Yields Oldest Human Skeleton, Redefines History

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1 hour ago, richard_smith237 said:

 

Surely the borders of Sundaland required the odd Homo-Erectus Immigration Crack-down !!! 

 

Only if the Sundaland paleofascists were homoerectusphobic.

 

In that case, they'd release an entire fleet of BMW smartosaurs.

 

image.jpeg.1e0b7bea2af6e2793f0e33b244635027.jpeg

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  • richard_smith237
    richard_smith237

    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

  • I understand Immigration are investigating whether or not he was on overstay.

  • NoDisplayName
    NoDisplayName

    Sure, but that was a Lao skeleton. Doesn't count.

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23 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

The limestone cave hosts five chambers, with three featuring vivid wall paintings, suggesting a once-bustling human settlement.

Did they found a valid VISA And TM3 or did they enter Thailand illegal?

6 hours ago, Yagoda said:

Any time anyone finds old stuff it is cool and interesting.

I am old.   I wish someone would tell my wife I am cool and interesting. 

Soft power in action. Next up: skeleton takes questions from journalists.

A troll post trolling about the topic title has been removed:

 

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On 2/24/2025 at 9:32 PM, NoDisplayName said:

 

Sure, but that was a Lao skeleton.

Doesn't count.

 

Died after drinking the local home brew.

  • 2 weeks later...
On 2/25/2025 at 9:49 AM, Moonlover said:

Just google 'limestone cave at Khao Sam Roi Yot'. There are plenty of images that confirm that it is indeed the same site.

It's not the cave where the remains were found. The picture shows the Phraya Nakhon cave. The remains were found in the Din cave, as stated in the article below.

 

 Thailand’s oldest human skeleton discovered in Prachuap Khiri Khan

 

https://www.nationthailand.com/blogs/news/general/40046675

4 minutes ago, GroveHillWanderer said:

It's not the cave where the remains were found. The picture shows the Phraya Nakhon cave. The remains were found in the Din cave, as stated in the article below.

 

 Thailand’s oldest human skeleton discovered in Prachuap Khiri Khan

 

https://www.nationthailand.com/blogs/news/general/40046675

I responded to a poster who asked where the photo was taken, not where the bones were found.

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