Description

When scientists discovered a 3.3
million-year-old skeleton of a child of the human lineage (hominin) in
2000, in the village of Hadar, Ethiopia, they were able to study growth
and development of Australopithecus
afarensis, an extinct hominin species. The team

When scientists discovered a 3.3
million-year-old skeleton of a child of the human lineage (hominin) in
2000, in the village of Hadar, Ethiopia, they were able to study growth
and development of Australopithecus
afarensis, an extinct hominin species. The team of researchers,
led by Zeresenay Alemseged of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary
Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, named the fossil DIK 1-1 and nicknamed
it Dikika baby after the Dikika research site. The Dikika fossil
preserves much of the skull, including the jaw and teeth, which enabled
scientists to study the teeth microstructures and to reconstruct the
pace at which individuals of the hominin A. afarensis
developed.

Details

Title
  • The Discovery of The Dikika Baby Fossil as Evidence for Australopithecine Growth and Development
Date Created
2015-02-02
Keywords
  • Concept
  • Fossil hominids
  • Excavations (Archaeology)
  • Biological Evolution
  • Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed
  • Age Determination by Teeth
  • Theories
  • hominin
  • Dikika
Collections this item is in

Machine-readable links