
Newly Discovered Fossils Reveal Unknown Humanlike Relative
A team of archeologists working at Ethiopia's Ledi-Geraru research project area unearthed a set of fossilized teeth that likely belonged to an unidentified species within the Australopithecus genus, known for having both human- and ape-like traits. The findings are published in Nature.
Until now, scientists have discovered six Australopithecus species in sites in Africa, including the famous Lucy fossil. But not all of these species intersected with our earliest human ancestors in the genus Homo.
The newly found teeth, from two individuals, date back 2.6 to 2.8 million years. While they share some characteristics with other Australopithecus species, comparisons with nearby fossils and other hominin specimens indicate they are distinct enough to be considered a new species.
At the same site, the scientists also discovered three other teeth that likely belonged to members of the earliest species of Homo, dating to 2.59 million years ago. That species was first identified in 2013 through a jawbone at the same study site.
These discoveries suggest that as many as four early human-like lineages—Homo, Paranthropus, Australopithecus garhi, and the newly identified species—may have coexisted in East Africa between 2.5 and 3.0 million years ago.
'This new research shows that the image many of us have in our minds of an ape to a Neanderthal to a modern human is not correct—evolution doesn't work like that,' Kaye Reed, a paleoecologist at Arizona State University, said in a statement. 'Here we have two hominin species that are together. And human evolution is not linear, it's a bushy tree, there are lifeforms that go extinct.'
The researchers need more fossils from the species to officially give it a name. But for now, the researchers have dubbed the new genus Ledi-Geraru Australopithecus.
How these early ancestors were able to coexist is still a mystery, but it's possible that they ate different things and weren't competing for the same resources. The scientists are currently examining the enamel of the newly discovered teeth to figure out what these species may have eaten.
'Whenever you have an exciting discovery, if you're a paleontologist, you always know that you need more information,' Reed said in a statement. 'You need more fossils. That's why it's an important field to train people in and for people to go out and find their own sites and find places that we haven't found fossils yet.'
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