An image shared on Facebook in Kenya shows four men pushing a cart carrying what seems to be a massive human skull.
“Huge skull discovered in Papua New Guinea in 1961,” the caption reads. “We've finally found the irrefutable evidence of a Giant!!!”
The post has been viewed nearly 20,000 times. But is the image evidence of a giant? We checked.

On the bottom left of the image is the URL for Worth1000, a website that once featured Photoshop image manipulation competitions but is now part of the Design Crowd creative community.
A TinEye reverse image search confirms that the image was an entry in one of the site’s competitions. A Google image search reveals that the image was submitted for the Size Matters 2 contest, in which designers were tasked with changing the size of something (or things) in an image in a way that was extraordinary, but not impossible.
It received 91 Photoshop submissions from 73 designers. The giant skull image is credited to a designer with the screen handle Norrit. In the search results, Africa Check also found the original photo used for the manipulated image. In the original, the cart is carrying a large metal drum – not a huge skull.
Africa Check has previously debunked other false claims that used manipulated images sourced from Worth1000 competitions. – Dancan Bwire
“Huge skull discovered in Papua New Guinea in 1961,” the caption reads. “We've finally found the irrefutable evidence of a Giant!!!”
The post has been viewed nearly 20,000 times. But is the image evidence of a giant? We checked.

Size Matters 2 design contest
On the bottom left of the image is the URL for Worth1000, a website that once featured Photoshop image manipulation competitions but is now part of the Design Crowd creative community.
A TinEye reverse image search confirms that the image was an entry in one of the site’s competitions. A Google image search reveals that the image was submitted for the Size Matters 2 contest, in which designers were tasked with changing the size of something (or things) in an image in a way that was extraordinary, but not impossible.
It received 91 Photoshop submissions from 73 designers. The giant skull image is credited to a designer with the screen handle Norrit. In the search results, Africa Check also found the original photo used for the manipulated image. In the original, the cart is carrying a large metal drum – not a huge skull.
Africa Check has previously debunked other false claims that used manipulated images sourced from Worth1000 competitions. – Dancan Bwire
Republish our content for free
For publishers: what to do if your post is rated false
A fact-checker has rated your Facebook or Instagram post as “false”, “altered”, “partly false” or “missing context”. This could have serious consequences. What do you do?
Click on our guide for the steps you should follow.
Publishers guideAfrica Check teams up with Facebook
Africa Check is a partner in Meta's third-party fact-checking programme to help stop the spread of false information on social media.
The content we rate as “false” will be downgraded on Facebook and Instagram. This means fewer people will see it.
You can also help identify false information on Facebook. This guide explains how.
Add new comment