Yunxian Man (Chinese: 郧县人; pinyin: Yúnxiàn rén) is a set of three hominid skull fossils discovered at the Xuetangliangzi site (学堂梁子遗址; Xuétángliángzǐ Yízhǐ) in Yunyang district, Hubei, China.[1][2][3][4] Two skulls were discovered, in 1989 and 1990, followed by a third in 2022.[1][4] The first two were described as "crushed and distorted," but "relatively complete," and compared to Homo erectus or early Homo sapiens.[1] In contrast, the third skull was discovered "in good condition."[5]
The Xuetangliangzi paleontological site is at the mouth of the Quyuan River (曲远河; Qūyuǎn Hé), where it flows into the Han River, so it has also been called the Quyuan River site.[6]
^de Lumley, Henry; de Lumley, Marie-Antoinette; Abdessadok, Salah; Bahain, Jean-Jacques; Batalla, Gerard (2001). "Le site de l'Homme de Yunxian"(PDF). HAL SHS. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2024-05-06. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
^李天元,王正华,李文森,冯小波,武仙竹; Li Tianyuan, Wang Zhenghua (1994-06-15). "湖北郧县曲远河口人类颅骨的形态特征及其在人类演化中的位置" [Morphological Features of Human Skulls from the Quyuan River Mouth, Yunxian, Hubei, and their Place in Human Evolution]. 人类学学报 (in Chinese). 13 (2): 104. ISSN1000-3193.