The skull fragments came from two sites in central Java.
One year later officials admitted the skull fragment was not human but probably came from a 4 month old donkey.
The remains were a skull fragment, with soft tissue and hair attached.
S. huilensis was named on the basis of skull fragments.
The bullets took skull fragments and brain into the ceiling.
The second to remove skull fragments from the brain.
They caused the most damage to begin with, including the hematoma and skull fragments.
Most other species are known from teeth and skull fragments.
One grave was found with some tiny skull fragments from an adult aged 45-50 years.
This skull fragment was first described by Sartono in 1982.