
During the summer of
1999, our
project conducted paleoanthropological, archaeological and
geological fieldwork at two sites in the Rancah District of West Java, Indonesia, (see
map) . This work is generously supported by the
National Science Foundation,
the Wenner-Gren
Foundation and the L.S.B.
Leakey Foundation. Preliminary surveys and excavations funded by the
Graduate School of the University
of Tennessee, were undertaken nearby during June of
1997. Our project has recovered numerous large mammal fossils similar
to those found at the famous, Early Pleistocene, fossil hominid site of
Sangiran in Central Java. The island of Java, however, emerged from the
sea from west to east, requiring mammals (including hominids) to migrate
through western Java to reach its central and eastern portions. This fact has
encouraged us regarding the potential of our fieldwork to recover the
first West Javan and possibly the most ancient Southeast Asian hominids yet
found. Important questions can be addressed
by this research, including:
For information about and photos of our field team, click
here.
To see the beauty of Java, click
here.