10 Prehistoric Human Species Too Deep For History Books

10 Prehistoric Human Species Too Deep For History Books 📌 Timestamps: ⏱ 00:00 — The cave that started it all ⏱ 00:29 — #10. Homo luzonensis — The species that crossed an impossible ocean ⏱ 03:58 — #9. The Nesher Ramla people — Sharing technology with us ⏱ 07:40 — #8. Homo floresiensis — The species that broke the brain-size rule ⏱ 11:33 — #7. The Red Deer Cave people — A face from the wrong era ⏱ 15:00 — #6. Homo longi — The skull hidden in a well for 85 years ⏱ 18:56 — #5. The Denisovans — Discovered from a single finger bone ⏱ 23:12 — #4. Population Y — The ancestor who shouldn't be in the Amazon ⏱ 27:31 — #3. The West African Ghost — A species with no fossil ⏱ 38:15 — #2. The Super-Archaic Lineage — A ghost inside a ghost ⏱ 36:40 — #1. Homo naledi — The species that broke the definition of humanity ⏱ 47:30 — What all of this means for us 🔬 All claims are based on peer-reviewed publications: — Détroit et al., Nature (2019) — Homo luzonensis — Hershkovitz et al., Science (2021) — Nesher Ramla Homo — Brown et al., Nature (2004) — Homo floresiensis — Curnoe et al., PLOS ONE (2012) — Red Deer Cave people — Ji et al., The Innovation (2021) — Homo longi — Reich et al., Nature (2010) — Denisovans — Huerta-Sánchez et al., Nature (2014) — EPAS1 / Tibetan adaptation — Skoglund et al., Nature (2015) — Population Y — Durvasula & Sankararaman, Science Advances (2020) — West African ghost lineage — Rogers et al., Science Advances (2020) — Super-archaic introgression — Berger et al., eLife / bioRxiv (2023) — Homo naledi mortuary behavior