Thursday, September 15, 2011

Archaeology: What's Hot Now: Australopithecus sebida

Archaeology: What's Hot Now
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Australopithecus sebida
Sep 15th 2011, 10:00

Australopithecus sebida ("sebida" means fountain or wellspring in seSotho) is a recently discovered hominin (ancient human ancestor). Two well-preserved examples of Au. sebida were recovered from Malapa Cave, a dolomite cave in the Cradle of Humankind archaeological site in Guateng province near Johannesburg, South Africa. Dated using paleomagnetic and Uranium-lead techniques on flowstone and underlying sediments to 1.977 million years ago, Au. sebida is considered by some scholars to be directly ancestral to early modern humans.

Two examples of Au. sebida were recovered from sediments in-filling Malapa Cave. MH1 is a juvenile male, represented by a partial cranium (seen in the image above), a fragmentary mandible and part of the post-cranial skeleton including right leg, right arm and pelvis. Based on comparisons with modern apes and humans, he is estimated to have died at approximately 12-13 years of age. MH 2 is an adult female, represented by isolated maxillary teeth, a partial mandible and partial post-cranial skeletal remains including right leg, right arm and pelvis.

Dates reported in April 2010 placed Au. sebida within a range of 1.78-1.95 million years ago (mya), on the basis of faunal correlation, Uranium-Lead dating and paleomagnetic data. In September of 2011, a scientific team working on the hominin reported a firm date of 1.977 mya, making Au. sebida older than any other known hominid fossil found in Africa to date, including Homo erectus and H. habilis.

Au. sebida has a small body, in comparison to H. erectus, for example, with long upper limbs, large joint surfaces and somewhat primitive limb structures. They were fully bipedal. The two hominins recovered from Malapa Cave are currently classed as Australopithecines, because their brain case is relatively small, and their arms are long for their bodies, in comparison to traditional human ancestors in the Homo group. But scholars researching Au. sebida argue that the evidence from Malapa Cave suggest a reworking of our hominid classifications may be in order.

Sources

This photo essay report provides information about the context and various skeletal elements from Au. sebida. It is a part of the guide to Lower Paleolithic , and the Dictionary of Archaeology.

Berger LR, De Ruiter DJ, Churchill SE, Schmid P, Carlson KJ, Dirks PHGM, and Kibii JM. 2010. Australopithecus sediba: A New Species of Homo-Like Australopith from South Africa. Science 238:195-204.

Dirks PHGM, Kibii JM, Kuhn BF, Steininger C, Churchill SE, Kramers JD, Pickering R, Farber DL, Meriaux A-S, Herries AIR et al. 2010. Geological Setting and Age of Australopithecus sediba from Southern Africa. Science 238 205-208.

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