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From Ethiopia comes an incredible discovery—early humans seem to have potentially lived alongside the very apes they evolved ...
Fossilized teeth show that two different kinds of ancient human ancestors coexisted more than 2 million years ago. One of ...
Ethiopian fossils uncover new species in human lineage as researchers discover Australopithecus teeth coexisting with early ...
Researchers have unearthed tooth fossils in Ethiopia dating to about 2.65 million years ago of a previously unknown species ...
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNResearchers Discover Fossilized Teeth That May Have Come From an Unknown Hominin Species
The find suggests that as many as four different hominin lineages lived in eastern Africa between 2.5 and 3 million years ago ...
Omar Abdulla, a fossil hunter from Ethiopia, made an important discovery in the Afar region in 2018. He was accompanied by paleontologist Kaye Reed, when they came across several f ...
Fossil teeth unearthed in Ethiopia suggest two distinct human ancestor species lived alongside each other between 2.6 and 2.8 ...
Afar region in Ethiopia reveals a fascinating discovery. Fossils of multiple human ancestor species are unearthed. These species coexisted about 2.6 to 2.8 million years ago. This challenges old views ...
A team of international scientists has discovered new fossils at a field site in Africa that indicate Australopithecus, and ...
New findings published in the journal Nature document the geological age, context and anatomy of hominin fossils discovered at the Ledi-Geraru Research Project, Ethiopia.
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Interesting Engineering on MSNFossil teeth unveil new early human species that lived 2.8 million years ago in Africa
The teeth fossil findings suggest that two different hominin species — Australopithecus and the earliest members of our own genus Homo — coexisted there between 2.6 and 2.8 million years ago.
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