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Homo erectus: Hominin #8 - 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.

After a century of fragmentary finds of Homo erectus, a beautifully preserved skeleton of a young male was found in Kenya in the mid-1980s. The boy’s skeleton shows the adaptive package of a fully terrestrial biped built to travel, capable of long-distance walking and running. Homo erectus adults were tall and long-limbed (more body surface area to deal with heat stress), and had a definitively projecting nose. Gone are the climbing-related features of the australopiths. The brain size is much larger than that of apes, australopiths and Homo habilis. They made two-sided hand axes, the first to do so. What accelerated this brain evolution and cultural development?

Theories include having hands completely freed up from locomotion to specialize as a dexterous manipulation organ capable of making stone tools, creating feedback loops between this process, brain evolution and the development of culture. H. erectus emerged 2 million years ago and lived more than 1.8 million years, making it the longest surviving of all our hominin relatives.

© 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?

Adresse du contrat0x495f...7b5e
Norme de jetonERC-1155
BlockchainEthereum
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Revenus de création
5%

Homo erectus: Hominin #8

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Homo erectus: Hominin #8

view_module
88 Éléments
visibility
79 vues
  • Prix unitaire
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    Quantité
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    De
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    Prix unitaire USD
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Homo erectus: Hominin #8 - 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.

After a century of fragmentary finds of Homo erectus, a beautifully preserved skeleton of a young male was found in Kenya in the mid-1980s. The boy’s skeleton shows the adaptive package of a fully terrestrial biped built to travel, capable of long-distance walking and running. Homo erectus adults were tall and long-limbed (more body surface area to deal with heat stress), and had a definitively projecting nose. Gone are the climbing-related features of the australopiths. The brain size is much larger than that of apes, australopiths and Homo habilis. They made two-sided hand axes, the first to do so. What accelerated this brain evolution and cultural development?

Theories include having hands completely freed up from locomotion to specialize as a dexterous manipulation organ capable of making stone tools, creating feedback loops between this process, brain evolution and the development of culture. H. erectus emerged 2 million years ago and lived more than 1.8 million years, making it the longest surviving of all our hominin relatives.

© 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?

Adresse du contrat0x495f...7b5e
Norme de jetonERC-1155
BlockchainEthereum
MétadonnéesGelées
Revenus de création
5%
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  • Ventes
  • Transferts
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