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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNResearchers Discover Fossilized Teeth That May Have Come From an Unknown Hominin Species
The find suggests that as many as four different hominin lineages lived in eastern Africa between 2.5 and 3 million years ago ...
New Ethiopian fossils show early Homo and Australopithecus lived together, revealing a complex human evolution story.
Ethiopian fossils uncover new species in human lineage as researchers discover Australopithecus teeth coexisting with early ...
Fossilized teeth show that two different kinds of ancient human ancestors coexisted more than 2 million years ago. One of ...
The Homo teeth—dated to between 2.59 and 2.78 million years old —reinforce the already known antiquity of our genus in the ...
From Ethiopia comes an incredible discovery—early humans seem to have potentially lived alongside the very apes they evolved ...
Arizona State University researchers unearthed fossils in Ethiopia that may have belonged to a previously undiscovered ...
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Knewz on MSNFossilized Teeth Evidence from Ethiopia Suggests Homo Species And Another Lineage of Hominins Occupied Same Region
An unidentified early hominin tooth fossil was uncovered in Ethiopia, indicating that two lineages of early hominins ...
The teeth also confirm that there were at least four types of hominins throughout East Africa at the time, with a fifth ...
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IFLScience on MSNNew Species Of Early Human Lived Alongside The Oldest Known Homo Over 2.6 Million Years Ago
Fossilized teeth discovered in Ethiopia have revealed a new-to-science species of Australopithecus, a genus of early hominins ...
A set of teeth discovered in Ethiopia likely belonged to a previously unidentified species of early human-like ancestors.
Researchers have unearthed tooth fossils in Ethiopia dating to about 2.65 million years ago of a previously unknown species ...
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