Before this, the earliest well-dated fossils firmly linked to our species in southern Asia were only around 45,000 years old.
Our species, Homo sapiens, is thought to have appeared in Africa around 200,000 years ago and later spread to other continents. The details of that dispersal are still murky. The discovery in China's Hunan province argues against a theory that the first wave reached southern Asia only about 60,000 years ago.
The finding may mean that people arrived in multiple waves, said Maria Martinon-Torres of University College London, a study author.
The finding raises the question of why our species didn't enter Europe until only about 40,000 to 45,000 years ago. Maybe Neanderthals crowded them out, basically out-competing them as hunter-gatherers until their populations started to fade, the researchers suggest.
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In a journal commentary, Robin Dennell of the University of Exeter in England suggests that cold winters might be a better explanation.
Shara Bailey, an expert on the evolution of human teeth at New York University who also didn't participate in the research, said some teeth appear to have cavities, which is unusual for humans living so long ago.
Cavities aren't common until the appearance of agriculture changed the human diet about 10,000 years ago, she said.