BBC Homepage World Service Education
BBC Homepagelow graphics version | feedback | help
BBC News Online
 You are in: Sci/Tech
Front Page 
World 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Education 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 

Monday, 15 January, 2001, 11:50 GMT
Hominid child discovered
Reports from Ethiopia say the remains of a 3.4-million-year-old hominid, or ape-man, have been discovered.

Palaeoanthropologist Dr Zeresenay Alemseged told reporters in Addis Ababa that researchers had uncovered a fragment of a lower jaw and an exceptionally well-preserved partial skeleton, including the skull.

It was probably a child, he said, and should provide valuable information in the study of human evolution.

The fossil remains were found in the Busidina-Dikika sector of the Afar region, in an area bordering the Republic of Djibouti. Busidina-Dukika lies south of Hadar, where numerous fossils of Austrolopithecus Afarensis, including the famous Lucy specimen, have been discovered.

"This is probably the earliest well-preserved young hominid so far known,'' Dr Zeresenay Alemseged said.

"The new hominid is an important addition which may fill in the gap between Lucy, which is dated to 3.2 million years, and a similar hominid species from Laetoli, Tanzania, and dated to 3.7 million years.''

Dr Alemseged is a post-doctoral research associate at the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University, US.

Search BBC News Online

Advanced search options
Launch console
BBC RADIO NEWS
BBC ONE TV NEWS
WORLD NEWS SUMMARY
PROGRAMMES GUIDE
See also:

09 Jan 01 | Sci/Tech
Fossil challenge to Africa theory
04 Dec 00 | Sci/Tech
'Oldest' ape-man fossils unearthed
11 May 00 | Sci/Tech
Fossils may be 'first Europeans'
22 Mar 00 | Sci/Tech
Ancestors walked on knuckles
15 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech
African ape-man's hand unearthed
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to more Sci/Tech stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Sci/Tech stories