Homo erectus
Guā-māu
| Homo erectus Sî-kan hoān-ûi: 2–0.07 Ma Chá-kî Keng-sin-sè – Āu-kî Keng-sin-sè | |
|---|---|
Tautavel Lâng e têng-kiàn kut-keh[1] | |
| Kho-ha̍k hun-lūi | |
| Kài: | Animalia |
| Mn̂g: | Chordata |
| Kong: | Mammalia |
| Bo̍k: | Primates |
| A-bo̍k: | Haplorhini |
| Infraorder: | Simiiformes |
| Kho: | Hominidae |
| Sio̍k: | Homo |
| Chéng: | H. erectus |
| Ha̍k-miâ | |
| Homo erectus (Dubois, 1893) | |
| Siâng-ì-miâ | |
Homo erectus (óa-im: "hó-mó e-lek-tu-suh" ; ì-sù: "khiā-ti̍t ê lâng") sī kó͘-ló jîn-lūi (archaic humans) tang-tiong chi̍t chéng, seng-oa̍h tī keng-sin-sè tē-chit sî-tāi.
Siōng-kó͘ ê hòa-chio̍h chèng-kù sio̍k 1.8 pah-bān nî chêng, sī 1991 nî tī Gruzia kok hoat-kiàn--ê.[2]
Chham-chiàu
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- ↑ based on numerous fossil remains of H. erectus. Museum of Prehistory Tautavel, France (2008 photograph)
- ↑ Haviland, William A.; Walrath, Dana; Prins, Harald E.L.; McBride, Bunny (2007). Evolution and Prehistory: The Human Challenge (8th pán.). Belmont, CA: Thomson Wadsworth. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-495-38190-7.