Did Giants Exist? Part 3: Was Gigantopithecus a Giant Prehistoric Man?

Long ago, somewhere between 300,000 and 8 million years ago give or take a millennium or two, a giant creature hunkered through the wilds of China and Southeast Asia.
Did Giants Exist? Part 3: Was Gigantopithecus a Giant Prehistoric Man?
(1971yes/iStock/Thinkstock)
12/23/2014
Updated:
1/9/2015

Long ago, somewhere between 300,000 and 8 million years ago give or take a millennium or two, a giant creature hunkered through the wilds of China and Southeast Asia.

It was about 9 feet (3 meters) tall and weighed almost half a ton, twice the size of today’s largest ape. All we have left of this creature is its jaw bones and teeth. Mystery surrounds these fossils. They’ve bred the unorthodox theory that Gigantopithecus was not a giant ape at all—but rather, a giant human-like being. Or, if it wasn’t like the giants of legend, perhaps it lives still today as the Bigfoot or Yeti.

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“We’re sort of dealing with the mystery ape,” said Rick Potts, a paleoanthropologist with the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., according to National Geographic. “We know so little about Gigantopithecus, largely because its remains consist of only three jaw bones and hundreds of teeth.”

<em>Gigantopithecus</em> molar, held by Prof. Friedemann Schrenk, Senckenberg-Institut, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. (<a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:F._Schrenk_mit_Gigantopithecus-Molar_2005.jpg" target="_blank">Wikimedia Commons</a>)
Gigantopithecus molar, held by Prof. Friedemann Schrenk, Senckenberg-Institut, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. (Wikimedia Commons)

 

<em>Gigantopithecus</em> mandible. (<a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Gigantopithecus#mediaviewer/File:Gigantopithecus_bilaspurensis_mandible.JPG" target="_blank">Ghedoghedo/Wikimedia Commons</a>)
Gigantopithecus mandible. (Ghedoghedo/Wikimedia Commons)

German paleoanthropologist Ralph von Koenigswald was among the early researchers to find these teeth. He procured them in the shops of Chinese apothecaries in the 1930s. They were known among the Chinese as “dragon’s teeth.” Koenigswald established the genus Gigantopithecus.

Anatomist Franz Weidenreich (1873–1948) hypothesized that Gigantopithecus was a giant ancestor of modern humans. He said the teeth were human-like, and his ideas became widely accepted, according to University of Iowa paleoanthropologist Russell L. Ciochon.

Weidenreich had been working with four teeth. As mandibles were discovered over the decades and more teeth surfaced, scientists broke away from Weidenreich’s view and started building models that supported Gigantopithecus as a prehistoric giant ape. The jaw was shaped similarly to that of an ape. Its teeth also share structural similarities with an ancient ape known as Sivapithecus, that lived about 10 million years ago. 

A museum artists' depiction of what <em>Gigentopithecus</em> may have looked like in prehistory, at the San Diego Museum of Man in California. (<a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gigantopithecus_blacki,_model_-_San_Diego_Museum_of_Man_-_cropped.JPG" target="_blank">Wikimedia Commons</a>)
A museum artists' depiction of what Gigentopithecus may have looked like in prehistory, at the San Diego Museum of Man in California. (Wikimedia Commons)

No other parts of the creature have been found, so it’s hard to tell a lot about it. Its size has been estimated from its teeth and jaw, and its structure has been assumed to be ape-like, hunched over on all fours. Assuming it is an ape and not a giant hominin (hominin is a relatively new classification denoting a hominid as closely related to humans), is it possible Gigantopithecus is the Yeti, Sasquatch, or Bigfoot of modern lore? Though it is said to have gone extinct about 200,000 years ago, near the end of the middle-Pleistocene period, some say it may live to this day.

One of the very few discovered <em>Gigantopithecus blacki</em> mandibles or jawbones. In the collections of The College of Wooster, Ohio. (<a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gigantopithecus_blacki_mandible_010112.jpg" target="_blank">Wilson44691/Wikimedia Commons</a>)
One of the very few discovered Gigantopithecus blacki mandibles or jawbones. In the collections of The College of Wooster, Ohio. (Wilson44691/Wikimedia Commons)

It is thought that extinction may have been caused by environmental change and/or the competition with humans, Homo erectus.

The problem on all fronts is a lack of evidence.

Most of the Bigfoot evidence is based on eyewitness accounts. Although, large Bigfoot-like encounters are notable in southeast Asia, especially among veterans of the Vietnam War, some of whom have contacted Ciochon with their accounts, according to his site.

Perhaps in the future more fossil evidence will come forward regarding the relationship between modern man and ancient creatures to build a larger picture of our forgotten history. As it was postulated in the early research of Gigantopithecus, perhaps with the discovery of limbs or other bones, scientists will again return to the early idea that the creature was very human-like, or perhaps the evidence will indeed solidify its place in the ape family. Until then, there is a lot we do not know about Gigantopithecus, ancient human giants, Bigfoot, and even our own remote history.

You can find the first two parts in this series, “Did Giants Exist?” here:

Did Giants Exist? Part 1: Legends and America’s Giant Skeletons

Did Giants Exist? Part 2: Where Are the Skeletons Now?

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