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History of Research
In 1891, Eugene Dubois discovers remains of hominid fossils (which he will call Pithecanthropus) on the Island of Java, South-East Asia. The two main consequences of this discovery:
Yet, in South Africa, 1924, discovery by accident of remains of child (at Taung) during exploitation of a quarry. Raymond Dart identifies remains of this child and publishes them in 1925 as a new species - Australopithecus africanus (which means "African southern ape"). Dart, a British-trained anatomist, was appointed in 1922 professor of anatomy at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. This discovery:
Nevertheless, his ideas were not accepted by the scientific community at the time:
It took almost 20 years before Dart's ideas could be accepted, due to notable new discoveries:
During the first half of the 20th century, most discoveries essential for paleoanthropology and human evolution are done in South Africa.
After World War II, research centers in East Africa with the couple Mary and Louis Leakey. They discovered major site of Olduvai (Tanzania):
Another major discovery of paleoanthropological interest comes from the Omo Valley in Ethiopia:
Also in 1967, RICHARD LEAKEY starts survey and excavation on the east shore of Lake Turkana (Kenya), at a location called Koobi Fora:
In 1972, a French-American expedition led by Donald Johanson and Yves Coppens focuses on a new locality (Hadar region) in the Awash Valley (Ethiopia):
From 1976 to 1979, MARY LEAKEY carries out research at site of Laetoli, in Tanzania:
Four australopithecine foot bones dated at around 3.5 million years were found at Sterkfontein in 1994 by Ronald Clarke:
Since then, eight more foot and leg bones have been found from the same individual, who has been nicknamed "Little Foot".
Recent discovery of new A. boisei skull is:
Recent research suggests that the some australopithecines were capable of a precision grip, like that of humans but unlike apes, which would have meant they were capable of making stone tools.
The oldest known stone tools have been found in Ethiopia in sediments dated at between 2.5 million and 2.6 million years old. The makers are unknown, but may be either early Homo or A. garhi
main question is, how have these spieces come to exist in the geographical areas so far apart from one another
A partial jaw found in Chad (Central Africa) greatly extends the geographical range in which australopithecines are known to have lived. The specimen (nicknamed Abel) has been attributed to a new species - Australopithecus bahrelghazali.
In June 2002, publication of major discovery of earliest hominid known: Sahelanthropus tchadensis (nickname: "Toumai").