PDA

View Full Version : Human skin found on 2-million-year-old fossil



Skywizard
11th May 2015, 15:15
http://d.ibtimes.co.uk/en/full/1437875/australopithecus-sediba.jpg?w=736
Professor Lee Berger poses with the reconstructed hand of Australopithecus sediba, during the unveiling of
the fossil in Johannesburg




Anthropologists say they have discovered human skin belonging to 2 million year-old fossils in the remains of six ancient skeletons found in South Africa.

The tissue is thought to be from the species Australopithecus sediba, thought to be an early human ancestor that has a mix of primitive and more advanced features.

It is a transitional species between Australopithecus species – the first species to walk upright – and early Homo species, of which humankind is the latest form.

The discovery may be the oldest skin ever found, and could even hold the key to valuable details about early humans' lives. Organic materials including the remains of their last meals were found between their teeth, potentially giving an insight into their diet.

Experts made the discovery in a cave near Johannesburg, which has been excavated since a 4' 2" male skeleton was found in 2008.

Professor Lee Berger, an anthropologist at the University in Johannesburg, told the Naked Scientists radio show: "We found out this wasn't just a normal type of rock that they were contained in – it was a rock that was preserving organic material.

"Plant remains are captured in it – seeds, things like that – even food particulates that are captured in the teeth, so we can see what they were eating.

"Maybe more remarkably, we think we've found fossil skin here too."

The investigation started after the professor's then 9-year-old son spotted a fossilised bone at the Malapa Nature Reserve site in 2008 – the first discovery of the new species.

http://d.ibtimes.co.uk/en/full/1437876/australopithecus-sediba-fossil.jpg?w=736
The remains of the Australopithecus sediba fossil are displayed during its unveiling in Johannesburg

They later excavated more bones, as well as an almost complete skull, before making the discovery public in 2010.

Scientists decided to build a laboratory on the spot in order to protect the "remarkable" fossils, including a platform that allows them to take off large pieces of the site to work on them in the laboratory.

Professor Berger says he has no idea how many more human fossils he may find.

"Every time we open up a little bit of rock here and move a little bit of dirt, we see someone new," he said. "We're introduced to another one of these people that died 2 million years ago."

The site will now be turned into a live laboratory, where members of the public can look down into the cave and see excavations in process.

According to research, the former "people" would have walked on two legs, but been "strikingly" short.

"Until they got closer, you probably wouldn't realise what's bothering you but something would bother you," Berger said. "They would probably only be standing about 1.3 metres tall. They also been more lightly built… They had longer arms than we do, more curved fingers. So, they're clearly climbing something. They also would've moved a little different.

"Their hips were slightly different than ours and their feet are slightly different. So, their gait would've probably been a more rolling type gait, slightly different from the more comfortable long distance stride we had.

"As they got closer to you, you'd be struck by for the most obvious thing which would be, their heads are tiny. If you imagine, you take a man's fist and curled it up, that's about the size of their brain and that would strike you. There'd be almost this pinhead on top of this small body. And that would immediately make you recognise that this is not a human."



Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/south-africa-early-human-skin-found-2-million-year-old-fossils-1500528



peace...

sigma6
12th May 2015, 01:14
then like maybe it's not really 2 million years old! o.O???

Ellisa
12th May 2015, 01:45
I don't understand the action preserving organic matter by the rock around the bones, especially of food particles around the teeth. It seems amazing that it is 2m years old. I wonder how many more of these hominids will be discovered, and, I wonder, -what will the next version will be after us? Once we've finished trashing the planet of course.

It is a stunning discovery.

Snoweagle
12th May 2015, 15:54
Our ancestors were GIANTS.

"We found out this wasn't just a normal type of rock that they were contained in – it was a rock that was preserving organic material" - ? - for 2 million years?
No mention of type of rock then?

The fact the site will be turned into a live lab now means that all new revelations will be securitised and cleansed of any truth.

Maybe it was a child that had been found. Now that I can accept.

Ellisa
13th May 2015, 02:18
Is this skeleton a Denosovan? I have just seen it suggested that the indonesian 'hobbits' have Denosovan DNA, as do many populations in SE Asia and the South Pacific. The "Hobbits' too are small and seem to have many characteristics of early hominids. Perhaps they are related--- though the 'Hobbits" are estimated to be 15.000 years old only. That would be an interesting gap on many levels I think.

Morbid
13th May 2015, 09:45
there are also places around the world where they find dinosaur footprints next to what seem to be the human ones. not sure how valid those are but still enough to take into account.