An important Paleolithic site, this site was first excavated in 1927, in a
cave on Dragon Bone Hill at Zhoukoudian, southwest of Beijing. In 1929, skull
fossils of Peking Man were discovered here, providing concrete evidence for the
existence of primitive man in the Beijing area and marking a milestone in the
history of paleo-anthropology. So far, a total of 6 skulls, 15 pieces of lower
jawbones, 157 teeth and numerous other bone segments from the bodies of about 40
humans have been excavated, providing concrete data for the study of the
evolution of pre-historic biology and the development of pre-historic culture.
The study of geological strata indicates that Peking Man lived about 700, 000
to 200,000 years ago. The average brain volume of these people was 1,088 ml (the
average for modern people is 1,400 ml). And it is estimated that their average
height reached 156 cm for males and 150 cm for females.
Peking Man was among the first human beings to learn how to use fire, and
could hunt large animals. Their average life expectancy was short; it is
estimated that 68.2% of them died by the age of 14, and only 4.5% lived up to 50
years.
Fossils of primitive men living 20,000 years ago were excavated in 1930 near
the top of Dragon Bone Hill, and were named Upper Cave Man fossils. In 1973,
fossils of New Cave Man were discovered. New Cave Man is believed to have lived
in the period between Peking Man and Upper cave Man, suggesting a continuity of
development.
b. Cultural Heritage
As primitive men evolved from ape men to intelligent men, Peking Man learned
how to make tools in the early Paleolithic period, marking them as humans,
different from apes.
The discovery and study of Peking Man and his culture solved the 50-year-long
controversy over whether ape-men were apes or men, which resulted from the
excavation of Java Man in the 19th century. Evidence indicates that at the dawn
of human civilization, ape-men did exist and they were descendants of southern
apes and ancestors of intelligent men, judging from their physique, culture and
social organization. Peking Man still serves as the benchmark for judging
whether an ancient creature was an ape or homo sapiens. The Zhoukoudian Site is
invaluable for paleo-anthropological research.
c. Fossils
In December 1929, under the leadership of Chinese anthropologist Pei
Wenzhong, a team from the Peking Institute of Geology excavated the first skull
fossil of Peking Man. It was identified as being at least 690,000 years old. In
the following large-scale excavation, a large number of skulls, bones, teeth and
bone segments were discovered. The finding of these ape-man fossils was of great
significance for the study of human evolution.
d. Evolution From Ape to Man
The site of Peking Man is a large natural cave. Some 700,000 years ago, a
species of homo sapiens lived here for about 300,000 years, leaving several
layers of ash as evidence of the use of fire. In addition, a number of stone
tools were excavated here.
In 1933, fossils of New Cave Man, who lived about 50,000 to 20,000 years ago,
were discovered here. He was a descendant of Peking Man, but much more evolved.
He resembled modern human beings in appearance, with fairly well developed
intelligence and superior physique to Peking Man.