Fossil find expands known range of ancient hominin Paranthropus

A discovery of Paranthropus remains in northern Ethiopia has revealed that the ape-like hominins inhabited a broader geographic area than previously thought. The 2.6-million-year-old jawbone and tooth, unearthed in the Afar region, suggest these early humans adapted to diverse environments. This finding challenges earlier views of their limited versatility.

In a breakthrough for human evolution studies, researchers have uncovered the first Paranthropus fossils in the remote Afar region of Ethiopia, at the Mille-Logya site. Excavations led by Zeresenay Alemseged of the University of Chicago have been ongoing since 2012 in this area, known for yielding Homo and Australopithecus remains. On January 19, 2019, a local assistant presented Alemseged with a toothless lower jawbone fragment, followed by the discovery of a left lower molar crown that same day. A CT scan verified distinctive Paranthropus features, including the bone's size, its width-to-height ratio, and intricate tooth roots. The specimen, dated to approximately 2.6 million years ago through multiple methods, is likely from Paranthropus aethiopicus or Paranthropus boisei, making it one of the oldest known examples of the genus, which existed from 2.7 to 1.4 million years ago across eastern and southern Africa. Previously, the northernmost find was a skull from Konso in southern Ethiopia, over 1,000 kilometers south of this site. Alemseged noted, “Paranthropus had been eluding us,” and described the jawbone's size as immediately striking. Carrie Mongle of Stony Brook University, not involved in the study, affirmed, “There’s no question that it’s Paranthropus,” and endorsed the dating. The location, a relatively open landscape, contrasts with wooded sites of earlier Paranthropus discoveries, indicating greater adaptability. Alemseged remarked, “Yes, they were specialised, [but] I think we might have inflated our understanding of that specialisation.” Their large jaws and teeth, once seen as limiting them to tough, chewy diets, did not prevent habitation in varied ecosystems, similar to Homo and Australopithecus. Recent evidence bolsters this view: 2023 findings in Kenya linked stone tools to Paranthropus teeth, and a 2025 description of a dexterous Paranthropus hand suggests tool use capabilities, possibly inherited from Australopithecus ancestors. The research appears in Nature (DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09826-x).

相关文章

Researchers have found fossil teeth in Ethiopia indicating that early Homo and an unknown Australopithecus species shared the landscape between 2.6 and 2.8 million years ago. The discovery adds to evidence that human evolution involved multiple overlapping lineages rather than a single straight path.

由 AI 报道

A newly discovered fossil ape from northern Egypt, named Masripithecus moghraensis, dates to 17-18 million years ago and may be closely related to the ancestors of modern apes. Researchers argue this finding shifts the focus from East Africa to northern Africa for early ape evolution. The species provides key insights into hominoid diversity during a period of continental connections.

Researchers from Australia and New Zealand have discovered fossils from 16 species, including a new ancestor of the kākāpō parrot, in a cave near Waitomo on the North Island. The remains, dating back about one million years, reveal waves of extinction driven by volcanic eruptions and climate shifts long before human arrival. The find fills a major gap in the country's fossil record.

由 AI 报道

A 59,000-year-old tooth from a Siberian cave reveals that Neanderthals drilled into cavities to treat decay. The discovery pushes back the origins of dentistry by tens of thousands of years. Researchers identified clear marks from stone tools on the molar.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝