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Homo floresiensiss: Hominin #11 - 1/88 Limited Edition

Format: 2160 x 2160 px - MP4 Looping video - 150 dpi

This Hominin bust by the Smithsonian paleoartist John Gurche is built with clay over a cast or 3D print of an ancient skull, from which a silicone mold is taken and the face painted into the mold. Acrylic eyes, and bear or human hair implanted manually and individually.

Materials: clay, casting, 3D printing, silicone, acrylic, paint, bear hair, human hair.

Medium: digital photography, post-production coloring, animation.

When Homo floresiensis became extinct 50,000 years ago, that left only Neanderthals and us as the inheritors of the planet. This species is perhaps the strangest branch of the family tree. Her short legs are like A. afarensis but her shorter forearm is like Homo. Found on the Indonesian island of Flores, her discoverers believe she is a new species of hominin, probably a dwarfed descendant of H. erectus. The phenomenon of dwarfing can occur in isolated island populations, when there is limited food and not many predators. Her tiny brain size is problematic for researchers.

Fossil records confirm a steady increase in brain size in hominin lineages—could it have been advantageous to reduce brain size because of limited available calories? Experts say though its brain was small, it showed expansion in areas that involved higher cognitive processes such as planning. Perhaps that’s why this hominin, nicknamed the “Hobbit” because of its diminutive size and big feet, could make advanced tools, hunt and control fire despite its small brain.

© 2022 TID Historical NFT Research Institute. All rights reserved.

Hominins by HARI Editions collection image

Lifelike reconstructions of our earliest ancestors – human history as you’ve never seen it before. The Hominins Collection by John Gurche gives collectors a unique opportunity to get up close with our earliest ancestors and learn about human evolution. The collection consists of 12 painstakingly researched faces, eight of which are on display in the Smithsonian Institution’s Hall of Human Origins.

Homo sapiens are the only survivors of a once diverse group of humans and human-like apes, collectively known as the hominins. So far the group includes around 20 known species. What did those hominins look like?

Contract Address0x495f...7b5e
Token StandardERC-1155
ChainEthereum
MetadataFrozen
Creator Earnings
5%

Homo floresiensiss: Hominin #11

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Homo floresiensiss: Hominin #11

view_module
88 items
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78 views
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    USD Unit Price
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    From
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    USD Unit Price
    Quantity
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    From

Homo floresiensiss: Hominin #11 - 1/88 Limited Edition

Format: 2160 x 2160 px - MP4 Looping video - 150 dpi

This Hominin bust by the Smithsonian paleoartist John Gurche is built with clay over a cast or 3D print of an ancient skull, from which a silicone mold is taken and the face painted into the mold. Acrylic eyes, and bear or human hair implanted manually and individually.

Materials: clay, casting, 3D printing, silicone, acrylic, paint, bear hair, human hair.

Medium: digital photography, post-production coloring, animation.

When Homo floresiensis became extinct 50,000 years ago, that left only Neanderthals and us as the inheritors of the planet. This species is perhaps the strangest branch of the family tree. Her short legs are like A. afarensis but her shorter forearm is like Homo. Found on the Indonesian island of Flores, her discoverers believe she is a new species of hominin, probably a dwarfed descendant of H. erectus. The phenomenon of dwarfing can occur in isolated island populations, when there is limited food and not many predators. Her tiny brain size is problematic for researchers.

Fossil records confirm a steady increase in brain size in hominin lineages—could it have been advantageous to reduce brain size because of limited available calories? Experts say though its brain was small, it showed expansion in areas that involved higher cognitive processes such as planning. Perhaps that’s why this hominin, nicknamed the “Hobbit” because of its diminutive size and big feet, could make advanced tools, hunt and control fire despite its small brain.

© 2022 TID Historical NFT Research Institute. All rights reserved.

Hominins by HARI Editions collection image

Lifelike reconstructions of our earliest ancestors – human history as you’ve never seen it before. The Hominins Collection by John Gurche gives collectors a unique opportunity to get up close with our earliest ancestors and learn about human evolution. The collection consists of 12 painstakingly researched faces, eight of which are on display in the Smithsonian Institution’s Hall of Human Origins.

Homo sapiens are the only survivors of a once diverse group of humans and human-like apes, collectively known as the hominins. So far the group includes around 20 known species. What did those hominins look like?

Contract Address0x495f...7b5e
Token StandardERC-1155
ChainEthereum
MetadataFrozen
Creator Earnings
5%
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