Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Engis_2> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 52 of
52
with 100 triples per page.
- Engis_2 abstract "Engis 2 refers to a partially preserved calvaria (cranium) and associated fragments of an upper and a lower jaw, a maxillary bone and an upper incisor tooth of a two to three year old Neanderthal child, being part of an assemblage, discovered in 1829 by Dutch physician and naturalist Philippe-Charles Schmerling in the Awirs Cave, situated just north of the Belgian municipality Engis. In 1833 Schmerling described and publicized the find, which included animal bones and stone tools. Recognizing their old age, he associated them with the "Ethiopian Type" of the diluvial period. Although it was not recognized until 1936 as such, the publication represents the first scientific description of a Neanderthal fossil.Misunderstood as to be "modern", the fossil received little attention after its publication in the 19th century as it was compared to Engis 1 - the very good and almost perfectly preserved skull of an adult Homo sapiens. In 1758 Carl Linnaeus had published the 10th edition of his work Systema Naturae in which Homo sapiens as a species name was introduced to the public, yet without a thorough diagnosis and without a precise description of the species-specific characteristics. As a result, any criteria by which a fossil of the species Homo sapiens could be classified into and distinguish from the genus Homo did not exist in the early 19th century. Even Thomas Henry Huxley, a supporter of Darwin's theory of evolution, saw in the 1863 findings of the Engis cave a "man of low degree of civilization" and also interpreted the in 1856 unearthed Neandertal 1 fossils of the Kleine Feldhofer Grotte as to belong within the range of variations of modern man. Additionally, the skull of an infant Neanderthal and an equally old child of anatomically modern humans are of far greater resemblance than their respective adult skulls. The vast majority of the anthropologists of the 19th and early 20th century considered all hominid fossils as to belong to representatives of early "races" of modern man. Hence it was incorrectly believed that the modern man's skull Engis 1 must be related to the child's skull Engis 2.An exact dating of the finds from Engis stands out to this day. The assignment of Engis 2 to Homo neanderthalensis and Engis 1 to Homo sapiens was primarily based on anatomical and chronological comparisons as Engis 2 was recovered in the context of Neanderthal Mousterian artefacts.In 1986 cut marks were found on the top of the skull of Engis 2, which were later identified as to be preparation damage " formed during restoration of the vault, moulding striae formed when mold part lines were incised into the fossil and profiling striae formed when craniograms were made with sharp steel instrument tips." The findings are preserved at the Service de Animale et Humaine Paléontologie of the University of Liège. The bone fragments called Engis 3 have gone missing. The evolutionary origin of a 1872 discovered ulna (forearm bone)fragment called Engis 4 is unclear, it has to date not been associated with a specific taxon.".
- Engis_2 thumbnail Engis_2_Schaedel_1.jpg?width=300.
- Engis_2 wikiPageExternalLink engis-2.
- Engis_2 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Engis_2 wikiPageID "47944203".
- Engis_2 wikiPageLength "8636".
- Engis_2 wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Engis_2 wikiPageRevisionID "683292844".
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Anatomy.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Anthropology.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Assemblage_(archaeology).
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Awirs.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Belgium.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Calvaria_(skull).
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Linnaeus.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Neanderthal_fossils.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Darwin.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Engis.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Evolution.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Genus.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Homo.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Homo_neanderthalensis.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Homo_sapiens.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Incisor.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Kleine_Feldhofer_Grotte.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink List_of_fossil_sites.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink List_of_human_evolution_fossils.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Maxilla.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Mousterian.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Municipality.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Neandertal_1.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Neanderthal.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Neanderthal_1.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Philippe-Charles_Schmerling.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Pleistocene.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Species.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Systema_Naturae.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Taxon.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Henry_Huxley.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink Ulna.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Liège.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink File:Engis_2_Schaedel_1.jpg.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLink File:Schmerling_Planche_I.jpg.
- Engis_2 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Engis 2".
- Engis_2 hasPhotoCollection Engis_2.
- Engis_2 wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Engis_2 subject Category:Neanderthal_fossils.
- Engis_2 comment "Engis 2 refers to a partially preserved calvaria (cranium) and associated fragments of an upper and a lower jaw, a maxillary bone and an upper incisor tooth of a two to three year old Neanderthal child, being part of an assemblage, discovered in 1829 by Dutch physician and naturalist Philippe-Charles Schmerling in the Awirs Cave, situated just north of the Belgian municipality Engis. In 1833 Schmerling described and publicized the find, which included animal bones and stone tools.".
- Engis_2 label "Engis 2".
- Engis_2 wasDerivedFrom Engis_2?oldid=683292844.
- Engis_2 depiction Engis_2_Schaedel_1.jpg.
- Engis_2 isPrimaryTopicOf Engis_2.