The new complete-body reconstruction of LB1, the “Little Lady of Flores,” by the Parisian paleoartist Elisabeth Daynès (©2009, S. Plailly/E. Daynès—Reconstruction Atelier Daynès Paris) of Homo floresiensis can now be shared.
This new Daynès illustration above is contained within the just-published December 2009 paper in Significance, “The geometry of hobbits: Homo floresiensis and human evolution,” regarding the definitive statistical analysis of Homo floresiensis being neither diseased humans or human pygmies.
Elisabeth Daynès and some of her reconstructed Neandertals. Below the artist works the bust on Mrs. Ples.
While produced in 2008, other 2009 views of these new, widely accepted reconstructions by Elisabeth Daynès are also available, such as here, and below.
The original drawing after LB1 was discovered was of a male, as seen in the above National Geographic painting of the first Homo foresiensis find. This is to be compared to Richard Klyver’s sketch of the Flores woman. The first fossil discovery of Homo floresiensis was of a female, not a male, of course.
The Little Lady of Flores is on the front cover of The Field Guide to Bigfoot and Other Mystery Primates , illustrated with a drawing of Homo floresiensis by wildlife artist Richard Klyver.
This paleoartist’s new reconstruction of the Homo floresiensis feet are especially interesting, for the type of footprint left might demonstrate an appearance of the hallux indicating notable separation from the other toes.
The various routine images of Homo floresiensis, such as the above two drawings, I predict, will now slowly be replaced by the regular sharing of Elisabeth Daynès’ reconstruction, see more views below, in future treatments about the Little Lady of Flores.
“The discovery that Homo floresiensis survived until so very recently, in geological terms, makes it more likely that stories of other mythical, human-like creatures such as Yetis are founded on grains of truth….Now, cryptozoology, the study of such fabulous creatures, can come in from the cold.”
~ Henry Gee, editor of Nature, “Flores, God and Cryptozoology,” 2004 editorial.
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ICM Moment
When visiting the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine, be certain to view the first replica of the Homo floresiensis skull to have been obtained and displayed in North America after the 2003 discovery of the Little Lady of Flores.
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