Samu (fossil)


Samu is the nickname given to a fragmentary human occipital bone found in Vértesszőlős, Central Transdanubia, Hungary.
The discovery was made on 21 August 1965 during a dig led by, and the fossil was named Sámuel, 21 August being the name day of biblical judge Samuel in Hungarian tradition.
It has since become widely known as Samu, a Hungarian short form of the name.
Hungarian anthropologist Andor Thoma initially described it as Homo erectus seu sapiens paleohungaricus. The fossil at the time was believed to be about 500,000 years old, and some literature of the 1970s classifies it as Homo erectus.
Analyses performed in the 1990s have revealed a significantly younger age, at between 250,000 and 300,000 years old, and the fossil is now classified as Homo heidelbergensis.
The itself had been discovered by Márton Pécsi in 1962. Also found at the site were two child teeth, Abbevillian stone tools and a fireplace. The site is now open to the public.
A replica of the Samu occipital bone is on exhibit in the local museum , as well as associated tools and fossilized animal footprints.
"Samu" has become a common name for plastic skeletons shown in biology classes in Hungarian student slang.