Rex has spent most of his life in the field. His father was also a researcher as was his grandfather who conducted one of the first scientific expeditions of Loch Ness.
Rex has an eye for detail and most of what you are about to see is not supposed to exist in Australia.
This includes Homo erectus. Giants-as shown by the 5 cm long pre-Molar tooth Rex found at the site of what is now Westmead Childrens Hospital.
Read About the entire collection below.
This truly unique collection of mineralised skulls and endocasts, the results of over 30 years fieldwork, presents what can only be described as an indisputable case for the evolution of the earliest modern humans [Homo sapiens] in Australia from Homo erectus, prior to the supposed first appearance of modern humans in Africa around 100,000 years ago, and long before the appearance of the earliest Australoids [Aborigines] in Australia by hundreds of thousands of years.
The findings presented here are subject to gradual change through new discoveries and reinterpretation of the evidence. As the skull-types demonstrate, the Australian Homo erectus specimens are of both the earlier flat-cranium 'archaic' and receding forehead 'late' forms, followed by both 'archaic' and 'modern' Homo sapiens.
Three small skull-types may represent a pygmy-size race of Homo with 'modern' features of considerable antiquity.
One skull-type suggests a primate presence in Pleistocene Australia at a remote period.
From New Zealand evidence of penetration there by Homo erectus is presented by two skull-types; an endocast of the 'archaic', and mineralised skull of the 'late'forms.
http://www.theaustralianyowieresearchcenter.com/skull_index_page.html