| Index: > A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
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| Toumaļ
Fossil
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| Sahelanthropus tchadensis |
Sahelanthropus tchadensis is an early fossil hominid, approximately 7 million years old. The fossils found, a cranium, two pieces of jaw, and some teeth, make up a head that has a mixture of human and chimpanzee features. The braincase suggests a chimpanzee, but the teeth are closer to those of humans, and the face includes brow ridges, a human feature not found on any living great ape. The point at the back of the skull where the neck muscles attach ( mastoid process) suggests that this species walked upright.
The discoverers claim that S. tchadensis is the oldest known hominid. The bones were found in Chad, nowhere near the previous known hominid fossils, which come from eastern and southern Africa. The location in which they were found is, however, a very difficult one in which to work, and had not been explored in any detail.
The fossil skull, nicknamed "Toumaļ", may be a common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees, though unlikely to be the most recent common ancestor, as evidence from the molecular clockThe molecular clock (based on the molecular clock hypothesis MCH ) is a technique in genetics, which researchers use to date when two species diverged, deduces elapsed time from the number of minor differences between their DNA sequences. The notion of as suggest humans and chimps diverged 1-2 million years after S. tchadensis (5mya).
This find complicates the picture of the human family tree. In particular, if Toumaļ is a direct human ancestor, his facial features bring the status of Australopithecus into doubt.
Another possibility is that Toumaļ is related to humans and chimpanzees, but the ancestor of neither. Brigitte Senut, the discoverer of OrrorinOrrorin tugenensis is an extinct species of hominid that is closely related to humans. The name was given by the discoverers who found Orrorin fossils near the village of Tugen, Kenya, and dated them to approximately 6 million years ago. The fossils found claims that the features of S. tchadensis are consistent with a female proto-gorilla. Even if Senut's claims are true the find would still be significant; there have been no chimp/bonobo or gorilla ancestors to be found anywhere in Africa and light would be shed on their family trees.