Publication | Open Access
Contemporaneity of <i>Australopithecus</i> , <i>Paranthropus</i> , and early <i>Homo erectus</i> in South Africa
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2020
Year
BiologyPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionFossil HomininsNatural SciencesMammalogyEvolutionary BiologySouth AfricaParanthropus Robustus FossilBiochronologyPaleoanthropologyPrimate FossilCladisticsAnthropologyComparative AnatomyPaleoecologyMedicineHuman Evolution
Dating the Drimolen hominins Fossil hominins from South Africa are enriching the story of early human evolution and dispersal. Herries et al. describe the geological context and dating of the hominin-bearing infilled cave, or palaeocave, at a site called Drimolen in South Africa (see the Perspective by Antón). They focus on the age and context of a recently discovered Homo erectus sensu lato fossil and a Paranthropus robustus fossil, which they dated to ∼2.04 million to 1.95 million years ago. This makes Drimolen one of the best-dated sites in South Africa and establishes these fossils as the oldest definitive specimens of their respective species ever discovered. The age confirms that species of Australopithecus, Paranthropus , and early Homo overlapped in the karst of South Africa ∼2 million years ago. Science , this issue p. eaaw7293 ; see also p. 34
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