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Netherlands to return ‘Java Man’ fossils to Indonesia in historic move

The move will see the skull cap and other remains of the first-ever Homo erectus found returned, after they were looted during Dutch colonial era

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Original fossils of Pithecanthropus erectus (now Homo erectus) found in Java in 1891.The find is commonly referred to as Java Man. Photo: Handout

The Netherlands pledged on Friday to return to Indonesia the remains of “Java Man”, the first-ever “Homo erectus” unearthed by modern scientists, in a landmark discovery for human evolution.

The Dutch plan to hand back some 28,000 fossils of the “Dubois Collection” looted by anatomist and geologist Eugene Dubois in 1891, when Indonesia was still a colony of the Netherlands.

They include Java Man’s skull cap, molar and femur that form part of evolutionary history – providing the first established link between apes and humans.

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Using convict labour to do the heavy lifting, Dubois excavated the remains in what became the most sensational ever find in fossil hunting.

The discovery enabled scientists to reconstruct “Homo erectus” – or “upright human” – who lived from around 1.9 million years ago to about 150,000 years ago.

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The find also sparked fierce controversy, partly because it challenged the idea that human civilisation only emerged in Europe and Africa.

The Dutch Independent Colonial Collections Committee recommended that the historic pieces be returned to Indonesia, as they were taken without permission.

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