An ancient, metre-tall human discovered by a Kiwi and dubbed "the Hobbit" was an entirely separate species and not simply a deformed forebear of our race today.
That's the remarkable new finding by an international team of scientists, including an Auckland volcanologist, following the discovery of 700,000-year-old remains of what appears to be the Hobbit's ancestor.
In two studies published today in leading journal Nature, the researchers describe the jaw and teeth remains, from at least one adult and two children, they excavated at a site called Mata Menge on the Indonesian island of Flores.
It was the same island where, a decade earlier, scientists led by late Kiwi archaeologist Professor Mike Morwood discovered in limestone caves the partial skeleton of a small-bodied female adult creature, dubbed Hobbit.
That species, named H. floresiensis and later dated at between 100,000 and 60,000 years old, was set apart by its small body and brain size, receding forehead, short legs and large feet - hence the nickname.