All posts tagged: paleoanthropology

Neanderthals began life more like humans than scientists thought

Neanderthals began life more like humans than scientists thought

Neanderthal babies have always been hard to study, mostly because their remains are so rare. That scarcity has left one of the oldest arguments in human origins unsettled: were Neanderthals following a fundamentally different developmental path from the start, or did the gap between them and modern humans open later? A set of fragile bones and milk teeth from Sesselfelsgrotte cave in Lower Bavaria now pushes that debate in a clearer direction. Using high-resolution micro-CT scans, an international team examined bone fragments from a Neanderthal fetus and two milk teeth from two young children who lived roughly 75,000 to 50,000 years ago. What they found suggests that, at least late in pregnancy, Neanderthals were developing in ways that looked remarkably familiar. “Our results indicate that both human forms progressed through strikingly similar growth processes, at least during the later stages of pregnancy,” said Prof. Dr. Thorsten Uthmeier, Chair of Prehistoric Archaeology at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. Prof. Dr. Thorsten Uthmeier, Chair of Prehistoric Archaeology at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. (CREDIT: Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg) The work adds weight to a broader …

New research finds early humans first used fire over one million years ago

New research finds early humans first used fire over one million years ago

Fire leaves behind a simple story when it is fresh. Ash settles, bones blacken, wood chars. Over a million years later, that story becomes much harder to read. In South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave, researchers now say some of the oldest traces of fire linked to early humans reach back between 1.07 and 1.79 million years. That pushes the timeline deeper into the Early Acheulean and strengthens the case that hominins were not merely encountering wildfire on the landscape. They were likely bringing it into the cave and sustaining it there. The new evidence comes from Wonderwerk Cave in the Kalahari Desert, a site that has already played a central role in debates over early fire use. Earlier work there had identified strong evidence of burning around 1 million years ago. The latest study, published in PLOS One, extends that chronology with signs of repeated burning in older deposits. At the center of the new work is a method that picks up traces of intense heat in fossil bone by using light. The Wonderwerk Cave. (CREDIT: …

3.67 million year old fossil provides new insight into the evolution of the human face

3.67 million year old fossil provides new insight into the evolution of the human face

Little Foot’s face looks like it has been through a slow-motion car crash, because it has. For millions of years, rock pressure and shifting sediments pushed and twisted the fossil’s facial bones until the front of the skull no longer fit together in a way scientists could safely fix by hand. Now, a new digital rebuild of that face is offering a sharper view of how early hominin faces varied across Africa around 4 to 3 million years ago. Little Foot, formally cataloged as StW 573, comes from the Sterkfontein Caves about 40 kilometers northwest of Johannesburg, inside South Africa’s Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site. It is described as the most complete early hominin skeleton ever found. The skeleton has fueled research for years, but the face remained a stubborn problem. A face rebuilt without touching the bone An international team led by Dr. Amelie Beaudet and Professor Dominic Stratford digitally reassembled the face using high-resolution synchrotron scanning at the Diamond Light Source in the United Kingdom and virtual reconstruction methods. The work was …