Two million-year-old skull of human cousin found by Australian team in South African cave

Two million-year-old skull of human cousin found by Australian team in South African cave

Two million-year-old skull of human cousin found by Australian team in South African cave

A two million-year-old skull in South Africa that sheds new light on human evolution has been discovered by Australian researchers.

The fossil was a Paranthropus robustus male, a species that lived as a ‘cousin species’ alongside our early human ancestors.

The two-million-year-old skull is a Paranthropus robustus specimen

The excavation and reconstruction of the large-toothed rare skull from the Drimolen Main Quarry north of Johannesburg, South Africa, was led by scholars from La Trobe University’s Archaeology Department in Melbourne, Australia.

Researchers described the fossil — that was found in 2018 on South African Father’s Day (June 20) — as exciting.

Dr Angeline Leece told the BBC: “Most of the fossil record is just a single tooth here and there so to have something like this is very rare, very lucky.”

She added that Paranthropus robustus appeared at roughly the same time as our direct ancestor Homo erectus, and the skull was found near the child fossil the team discovered at the same site in 2015.

Dr Leece said: “These two vastly different species, Homo erectus with their relatively large brains and small teeth, and Paranthropus robustus with their relatively large teeth and small brains, represent divergent evolutionary experiments,” Dr Leece said.

“Through time, Paranthropus robustus likely evolved to generate and withstand higher forces produced during biting and chewing food that was hard or mechanically challenging to process with their jaws and teeth — such as tubers. 

The fossil was found in the Drimolen quarry near Johannesburg

“Future research will clarify whether environmental changes placed populations under dietary stress and how that impacted human evolution.”

La Trobe PhD candidate Jesse Martin said the findings were published today in Nature Ecology and Evolution and could lead to a better understanding of our human ancestors.

Mr Martin said that working with the fossil pieces was like “working with cardboard” and that he used plastic straws to get the remaining pieces of dirt off them.

He added the skull discovery presented a rare example of “microevolution” within human lineage showing that Paranthropus robustus evolved their iconic chewing adaptations incrementally, possibly over hundreds of thousands of years, in response to environmental change.

The skull took over 300 hours to piece together

It is widely thought that two other hominin (human-like species) existed alongside Paranthropus robustus at that time in Africa, they are Homo erectus and Homo heidelbergensis 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *