An Insight into Hominid Evolution and Dispersion in Southeastern Asia
Imagine the pleasure (and significance) of finding a hominid-made stone artefact sitting in a fossil soil dated at around 1 million years old.
Flores is one of the biggest, most rugged and most beautiful islands in the eastern Indonesian archipelago (also known as Nusa Tenggara or Lesser Sunda Islands). Flores owes its name to the Portuguese, who called its eastern cape, Cabo de Flores, meaning Cape of Flowers. Flores is located immediately northward of the geologically active Sunda Arc, which demarcates the active convergent plate boundary between the Australasian and Eurasian plates. Flores itself has 14 active volcanoes (see Figure 1) – only Java and Sumatra along this arc have more.
Being located so close to a convergent plate boundary, Flores is not immune from the effects of large subduction-related earthquakes. On December 12th 1992, Flores experienced an earthquake measuring 7.8 that generated a large tsunami killing 3000 people in eastern Flores and flattened its largest town of Maumere.
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