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1.5 million year old "Garden of Eden" where two human species lived together

Người Lao ĐộngNgười Lao Động01/12/2024

(NLDO) - A barren land in modern times was once a very fertile place, the evolutionary cradle of two different human species, one of which was very similar to us.


In the Turkana Basin of Kenya, a series of mysterious fossil footprints have been uncovered on the shores of an ancient lake, dating back 1.2 million years before modern humans like us, Homo sapiens, walked the planet.

Geologist and anthropologist Craig Feibel from Rutgers University (USA) and colleagues analyzed the above fossils and determined that they belonged to two different species.

Two types of footprints belonging to two different human species imprinted in ancient mud - Photo: SCIENCE

The first species is Homo erectus, or “upright man”. They may have been our ancestors because there is a well-supported hypothesis that Homo ergaster – the ancestor of Homo heidelbergensis and then Neanderthals and Homo sapiens – branched off from this species.

The second species was Paranthropus boisei, a more primitive-looking ape.

Detailed analysis showed that the footprints were made in the wet mud by at least two individuals from two different species who passed through the area within hours of each other, seemingly peacefully, without any signs of hunting each other.

Paranthropus boisei footprints - Photo: SCIENCE

“The presence of footprints on the same surface, occurring close together in time, places the two species at the lake's edge, using the same habitat,” Dr. Feibel explained.

It is not impossible for two species of humans to coexist peacefully . Homo sapiens lived and even interbred with both Neanderthals and Denisovans, leaving behind many interspecies genes in our DNA.

But Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei were so far apart in evolution, and their lifestyles were so different, that it's possible that peaceful coexistence in ancient Kenya was simply a lack of competition between the two communities.

Homo erectus footprints - Photo: SCIENCE

These new footprints, along with many fainter footprints discovered previously, belong to a cluster of sites called Koobi Fora, which may have been an ancient swamp.

The footprints were preserved under layers of sediment and hardened as the region's climate gradually dried over the past 1.5 million years.

This is a valuable piece of data, the researchers say, and further analysis promises to help us better understand the once-probably fertile land that provided the conditions for the evolution of many human species.

With footprints, we can see how the individuals who left them lived, moved around their particular environment, and how they interacted with each other and with other animals.

“That's something we can't really tell from bones or stone tools,” says Dr. Feibel.

The preliminary study was just published in the journal Science.



Source: https://nld.com.vn/vuon-dia-dang-15-trieu-tuoi-noi-2-loai-nguoi-cung-chung-song-196241201105111931.htm

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