"The Peking man was a thinking being, standing erect, dating to the beginning of the Ice Age."[1]
"Quer Lulu?"
Publicações
"Skeletal Remains of Sinanthropus Other Than Skull Parts." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. XI, No. 4, 1932.
"Evidences of the Use of Fire by Sinanthropus." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. XI, No. 2, Peiping, 1931.
"Palæogeography and Polar Shift. A Study of Hypothetical Projections." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. X, Peiping, 1931.
"Notice of the Recovery of a Second Adult Sinanthropus Skull Specimen." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. IX, No. 2, 1930.
"Interim Report on the Skull of Sinanthropus." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. IX, No. I, 1930.
"Preliminary Notice of the Discovery of an Adult Sinanthropus Skull at Chou Kou Tien." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. VIII, No. 3, 1929.
"Preliminary Note on Additional Sinanthropus Material Discovered in Chou Kou Tien During 1923." Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. VIII, No. 1, 1929.
"The Aeneolithic Yang Shao People of North China." Reprinted from the Transactions of the 6th Congress of the Far Eastern Association of Tropical Medicine. Tokyo, Japan, 1925.
"Asia and the Dispersal of Primates." Reprinted From the Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, Vol. IV, No. 2., 1925.
"A Note of the Physical Characters of the Prehistoric Kansu Race." From Memoirs of the Geological Survey of China, Series A, No. 5, June, 1925.