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Scientists Find Fossil of Hominid in South Africa

The fossil remains of an early Hominid child have been discovered in a cave in South Africa by a team of international and South African researchers. Researchers announced the discovery of a partial skull and teeth of a Homo naledi child who died almost 250,000 years ago when he was approximately four to six years old. The discovery is described in two papers in the journal, PaleoAnthropology.

Researchers were found in a remote part of the cave that suggests the body had been placed there on purpose, in what could be a kind of grave, said the announcement Thursday. Professor Guy Berger of the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, who led the team and made the announcement Thursday said that the placement “adds mystery as to how these many remains came to be in these remote, dark spaces of the Rising Star Cave system.

Homo Naledi is a species of archaic human found in the Rising Star Cave, Cradle of Humankind, 50 kilometers (30 miles) northwest of Johannesburg. Homo Naledi dates to the Middle Pleistocene era 335,000–236,000 years ago. The initial discovery, first publicly announced in 2015, comprises 1,550 specimens, representing 737 different elements, and at least 15 different individuals.

Berger said that Hominid Naledi remains one of the most enigmatic ancient human relatives ever discovered. It is a primitive species, existing at a time when previously we thought only modern humans were in Africa. Its very presence at that time and in this place complexifies our understanding of who did what first concerning the invention of complex stone tool cultures and even ritual practices.

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