Sangiran                is located 15 km from Surakarta. It is a village located 17 Km north                of Solo, on the road to Purwodadi. It is an important place for                Pithecanthropus Erectus, the pre-historic Java man. It is fossilized                land of prehistoric living things. The Pleistocene Museum keeps                some skills of the erectus, fossils of plants and animals. Sangiran                and other places such as Wajak (near Tulungangung) and Trinil (near                Ngawi) are significant places for human evolution/theory. It is                interesting place for scientific tourism in the field of geology,                anthropology and archeology. Many experts came to this site to do                some research and study among other; Van Es (1939), Duyfyes (1936),                Van Bemmelen (1937), Van Koeningswald (1938), Sartono (1960), Suradi                (1962) and Otto Sudarmaji (1976). Van Koeningswald said that more                than five different types of hominoid fossils have been found in                Sangiran, it was incredible. There is no other place in the world                like Sangiran. The Sangiran fossils are very various, they were                earth as well as sea fossils. There was a possibility that island                of Java was erected from the bottom of sea million years ago.
In 1891, Eugene Dubois, a French anthropologist discovered fossils                of Pithecanthropus Erectus, the oldest Java man known. Again in                1930 and 1931, Ngandong Village, Trinil-Mojokerto, was marked with                the discovery of fossils of a man that belonged to the Pleistocene                Period. It revealed human history from many centuries ago. Prof.                Dr. Van Koenigswald in 1936 found more evidence about human evolution.                He discovered some fossils that support the theory of human growth                from an ape-man to be man as we are now. Other fossils including                those of mammoths (prehistoric elephant) are now preserved in the                Bandung Geological Museum. In mid 1980, the finding of a complete                4 m tall elephant startled scientists. Nowadays, the villagers of                Sangiran are making souvenirs from stones such as statues, axes,                eggs, rings, etc to promote tourism.
(Sumber: http://www.indonesia-tourism.com)
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