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Anthropologists have found the oldest skull of one our of earliest human ancestors. The 3.8-million-year-old fossil changes our understanding of human history.

Aug 28, 2019, 23:08 IST

A facial reconstruction of the 3.8-million-year-old Australopithecus anamensis specimen found in Ethiopia in 2016.Matt Crow, courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Facial reconstruction by John Gurche.

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  • Anthropologists have found very few fossils of the Australopithecus species - a hominin ancestor that lived in Africa between roughly 4 and 2 million years ago.
  • Now, researchers have discovered that an Australopithecus anamensis skull found in 2016 is 3.8 million years old, making it the oldest Australopithecus skull ever found.
  • The skull, named "MRD," was discovered in the Afar region of Ethiopia.
  • Its age indicates that Australopithecus anamensis co-existed with Australopithecus afararensis, a species that anthropologists thought lived later on.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Everything we know about the group of human ancestors called Australopiths comes from just a few dozen fossils.

But a skull discovered in Ethiopia is now changing anthropologists' understanding of the group.

The skull, nicknamed "MRD," was originally unearthed in 2016 in the Afar region in Ethiopia. By carbon-dating minerals in the rocks near where MRD was found, scientists determined the fossil to be roughly 3.8 million years old. That makes it the oldest Australopithecus skull ever found, edging out the previous record-holder by about 200,000 years.

The scientists' findings about the MRD, published today in the journal Nature, also show that it belonged to a member of the oldest species of Australopith, called Australopithecus anamensis.

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That means MRD (the nickname comes from its collection number, MRD-VP-1/1) co-existed with another species of human ancestor, Australopithecus afarensis, for at least 100,000 years. The nearly complete skeleton "Lucy," was a member of that latter group, which roamed Africa between 3.9 and 3.0 million years ago.

The overlapping timelines of these two species alters scientists' timeline of human evolution, since they previously thought the species burst onto the evolutionary scene one after the other.

A face for Australopithecus anamensis

A side view of the Australopithecus anamensis skull known as &quotMRD," which was discovered in Ethiopia in 2016.Dale Omori, Courtesy of the Cleveland Natural History Museum

The term hominins refers to any ancestor in the human lineage (including modern-day Homo sapiens) who are more closely related to each other than they are to chimpanzees. That includes everything from stone tool-wielding Homo erectus to our Neanderthal cousins.

Australopiths, which were bipedally adept and occasionally climbed trees, were precursors to human ancestors like Neanderthals. They form an evolutionary link between the last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees and the ancestors of modern humans.

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Read More: Scientists may have discovered a new human species. It lived on a tiny island in the Philippines at the same time as Homo sapiens.

Scientists previously thought Australopithecus anamensis lived before other early hominin species. But the 3.8-million-year-old skull shows that there wasn't a linear transition from one species to the next, in which MRD-like individuals disappeared and "Lucy"-like individuals took their place.

"This is a game changer in our understanding of human evolution during the Pliocene," Yohannes Haile-Selassie, the lead author of the study, said in a press conference.

Human hands holding a 3.8-million-year-old Australopithecus anamensis skull composite, rendered by Jennifer Taylor.Dale Omori and Liz Russell, Courtesy of Cleveland Museum of Natural History

The team's discovery also revealed for the first time what Australopithecus anamensis' face looked like.

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"This is the first specimen to ever give us a glimpse about this species - previous findings were limited to isolated jaw fragments, teeth, and one small fragment of an ear bone," Haile-Selassie said.

Those previous Australopithecus anamensis specimens, found in Kenya and Ethiopia, were between 4.2 million and 3.9 million years old. This new skull is slightly younger, but it's still the oldest Australopithecus skull ever found -it's almost 200,000 years older than the skull found with the nearly complete "Little Foot" skeleton, which is 3.67 million years old.

MRD shows that Australopithecus anamensis had a protruding face with a prominent forehead and cheek bones, much like other Australopiths in the fossil record.

The 3.8-million-year-old Australopithecus anamensis skull known as &quotMRD" was found in Ethiopia in 2016.Courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History

"Australopiths have big, massive faces," study co-author Stephanie Melillo from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, said in a press conference. Members of the genus Homo, which includes modern humans, have flatter, more slender faces by comparison.

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The skull also revealed that the species had a small brain, which aligns with previous assumptions about its placement on the evolutionary tree between "Lucy"-like australopiths and earlier hominins that were not bipedal.

MRD lived 3.8 million years ago in Ethiopia

Anthropologist Yohannes Haile-Selassie holds the Australopithecus anamensis skull known as Courtesy of Cleveland Museum of Natural History

Haile-Selassie knew his team had found something special when a worker named Ali Bereino stumbled upon a jaw bone in the sandstone near the Woranso-Mille District of Ethiopia on February 10, 2016.

"I couldn't believe my eyes when I spotted the rest of the cranium. It was a eureka moment and a dream come true," he said in a press release.

They discovered an almost complete skull split into two major pieces - the upper jaw bone was separated from rest of head, Haile-Selassie said. The team then analyzed the fossil specimen for the next few years, digitally reconstructing the skull's missing pieces and comparing the renderings to other Australopith fossils. That work led them to determine that MRD belonged to the species Australopithecus anamensis.

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The researchers also concluded that MRD was likely a male, and lived in a dry, shrubland habitat.

"This cranium looks set to become another celebrated icon of human evolution," Fred Spoor, a researcher at London's Natural History Museum who was not involved in the studies, wrote in an accompanying Nature article.

"Its discovery will substantially affect our thinking … on the evolutionary family tree of early hominins," he added.

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