Homo Denisovensis[1][2] (nomen nondum rite constitutum) est populus generis Hominis, specie nondum statuta, ex ossibus in spelunca Denisova Siberiae definitus. Recentius vestigia eiusdem progeniei tam e dente in spelunca Baishiya Thibeti quam in DNA populorum recentium Asiae et Oceaniae recognita sunt.
Nomen formá Latinum in contextibus aliarum linguarum reperitur, e.g. Paolo Anagnostou, Marco Capocasa, Nicola Milia, Emanuele Sanna, Cinzia Battaggia, Daniela Luzi, et Giovanni Destro Bisol, "When Data Sharing Gets Close to 100%: What Human Paleogenetics Can Teach the Open Science Movement," PLoS One, 23 Martii 2015, e0121409, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0121409.
- Shara E. Bailey, Jean-Jacques Hublin, Susan C. Antón, "Rare dental trait provides morphological evidence of archaic introgression in Asian fossil record" in PNAS (8 Iulii 2019)
- Fahu Chen, "A late Middle Pleistocene Denisovan mandible from the Tibetan Plateau" in Nature vol. 569 (2019) pp. 409–412
- Ann Gibbons, "First fossil jaw of Denisovans finally puts a face on elusive human relatives" in Science (1 Maii 2019)
- David Gokhman et al., "Reconstructing Denisovan Anatomy Using DNA Methylation Maps" in Cell vol. 179 (19 Septembris 2019) pp. 180-192.E10
- Konstantin V Gunbin, Dmitry A Afonnikov, Nikolay A Kolchanov, Anatoly P Derevianko, Eugeny I Rogaev, "The evolution of Homo sapiens denisova and Homo sapiens neanderthalensis miRNA targeting genes in the prenatal and postnatal brain" in BMC Genomics 16 suppl. 13 (2015) p. S4
- Susanna Sawyer et al., "Nuclear and mitochondrial DNA sequences from two Denisovan individuals" in PNAS 112 no. 51 (16 Novembris 2015) pp. 15696–15700
- Alisa Zubova, T. A. Chikisheva, M. V. Shunkov, "The Morphology of Permanent Molars from the Paleolithic Layers of Denisova Cave" in Archaeology Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia 45 (2017) pp. 121-134