Sangiran
UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
---|---|
Location | Indonesia |
Criteria | Cultural: iii, vi |
Reference | 593 |
Inscription | 1996 (20th Session) |
Area | 5,600 ha |
Coordinates | 7°27′S 110°50′E / 7.450°S 110.833°E |
Sangiran is an
The area comprises about 56 km2 (7 km x 8 km). It is located in
History
- 1883: The Dutch paleoanthropologist Eugène Dubois undertook preliminary fieldwork at Sangiran. However, Dubois did not find many fossils of interest so he shifted his attention to Trinil in East Java where he found significant discoveries.
- 1934: The Pithecanthropus erectus ("Java Man", now reclassified as part of the species Homo erectus), were found here. About 60 more human fossils, among them the enigmatic "Meganthropus", have since been found. Sangiran 2, for example, was discovered by von Koenigswald at the site. In addition, there are considerable numbers of remains of the animals that these primitive humans hunted, and of others that merely shared the habitat.
- 1977: The Indonesian Government designated an area of 56 km2 around Sangiran as a Daerah Cagar Budaya (Protected Cultural Area).[4]
- 1988: A modest local site museum and conservation laboratory were set up at Sangiran.
- 1996: UNESCO registered Sangiran as a World Heritage Site on the World Heritage List as the Sangiran Early Man Site.[5]
- 2011: The current museum and visitors' centre was opened by the Minister for Education and Culture on 15 December.
- 2012: President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono visited the museum in February accompanied by 11 cabinet ministers.
Over time, following the initial work by Dubois and von Koenigswald at Sangiran, other scholars including Indonesian archeologists undertook work at the site. Indonesian scholars included Teuku Jacob, Etty Indriati, Sartono, Fachroel Aziz, Harry Widianto, Yahdi Zaim, and Johan Arif.[6]
Sangiran museum
A modest museum existed at Sangiran for several decades before a modern, well-functioning museum and visitors' centre was opened in December 2011. The new building, a modern museum, contains three main halls with extensive displays and impressive dioramas of the Sangiran area as it was believed to be around 1 million years ago. Several other centres are under construction as well (early 2013) so that by 2014 it is expected that there will be four centres at different places within the overall Sangiran site. The four planned centres are:[7]
- Krikilan: the existing site with the main visitors centre and museum.
- Ngebung: to contain a history of the discovery of the Sangiran site.
- Bukuran: to provide information about the discovery of prehistoric human fossils at Sangiran.
- Dayu: to present information about the latest research.
The current museum and visitors' centre has three main halls. The first hall contains several dioramas that provide information about the early humans and animals which existed at the Sangiran site around 1 million years ago. The second hall, which is more extensive, presents much detailed material about the wide variety of fossils found at Sangiran and about the history of exploration at the site. The third hall, in a separate impressive presentation, contains a large diorama which provides a sweeping view of the overall area of Sangiran, with volcanoes such as
Access
Access to the Sangiran museum is gained by travelling around 15 km north from Surakarta along the main road towards the central Java town of
Social and other issues
Development of the overall Sangiran site has not been without controversy. Uncontrolled digging and illegal trade in fossils have occurred on various occasions since the site was first discovered. For a considerable period, villagers in the area frequently dug up and sold fossils to local buyers. Following the enactment of National Law No. 5 of 1992 on cultural heritage objects, there were stronger controls on these activities.[8] However, illegal activities have sometimes continued to occur in recent years.[9] In 2010, for example, an American citizen claiming to be a scientist was arrested near Sangiran while travelling in a truck containing 43 different types of fossils in boxes and sacks with an estimated market value of $2 million.[10]
More recently, there has been discussion in the Indonesian media about the way that the development of the Sangiran site has failed to bring any significant tangible benefits to the rural communities in the local area.[11]
See also
- Homo floresiensis
- Liang Bua Cave site in Flores
- List of fossil sites
- List of human evolution fossils
- Meganthropus
- Mojokerto child (another Javanese Homo erectus fossil)
- Prehistoric Asia
- Prehistoric Indonesia
- Solo Man (refers to the Ngandong site in Java)
- Trinil fossil site in Java.
External links
- UNESCO World Heritage Centre Sangiran Early Man Site details.
- Notes about the site at Best Travel Guides: Sangiran
- 360° Panorama of Sangiran museum on World heritage tour
- Accommodation information about Sangiran Museum
- An international conference about Sangiran: Man, Culture and Environment in Pleistocene Times was held in Surakarta (Solo) in September 1998
- A booklet prepared by Dr Etty Indriati from Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta provides a useful guide to the site in Indonesian. See Etty Indriati, Warisan budaya dan munusia purba Indonesia Sangiran [Cultural heritage and ancient Indonesian man Sangiran], PT Citra Aji Parama, Yogyakarta, 2009. This booklet, along with other notes, may be purchased at the entry to the museum.
References
- .
- ^ World Heritage List note, Sangiran, No 593, September 1995.
- ^ Tantri Yuliandini, 'Tracing man's origins in Sangiran, Pacitan' Archived 2013-09-05 at the Wayback Machine, The Jakarta Post, 23 August 2002.
- ^ Surat Keputusan Menteri Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan (Decision of the Minister of Education and culture) No. 070/O/1977 dated 15 March 1977.
- ^ UNESCO Document WHC-96/Conf. 2201/21.
- ^ Etty Indriati, Warisan budaya dan munusia purba Indonesia Sangiran [Cultural heritage and ancient Indonesian man Sangiran], PT Citra Aji Parama, Yogyakarta, 2009.
- ^ Kusumasari Ayuningtyas, 'Sangiran Museum to open in 2014', The Jakarta Post, 18 February 2012.
- ^ Ganug Nugroho Adi, 'The paradox of Sangiran', The Jakarta Post, 11 June 2013.
- ^ Lusiana Indriasani, 'Kemiskinan dan Penjualan Benda Purbakala Sangiran' Archived 2012-01-18 at the Wayback Machine (Poverty and the sale of ancient artifacts at Sangiran), Kompas, 19 December 2011. There are similar problems at other archaeological sites in Indonesia where regulatory controls are weak, such as at Padang Lawas archaeological site in North Sumatra.
- ^ Nurfika Osman, 'American Held Over Rare Fossils Theft' Archived 2010-10-27 at the Wayback Machine, The Jakarta Globe, 24 October 2010.
- ^ Sri Rejeksi, 'Sangiran, Bumi manusia Jawa yang tandus' [Sangiran, Java's barren homelands], Kompas, 16 March 2013. Also Sri Rejeksi, 'Tanah Air: Wajah Kontradiktif Sangiran' [Homeland: The Contradictory Face of Sangiran], Kompas, 16 March 2013.