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Keyword: dikika

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  • 3 million-year-old toddler could climb trees, study says

    07/08/2018 5:20:41 PM PDT · by ETL · 47 replies
    FoxNews.com/Science ^ | July 6, 2018 | Kimberly Hickok
    More than 3 million years ago, our adult human ancestors were walking on two feet and didn't have the option of a fashionable baby sling to carry their kids around in. Instead, Australopithecus afarensis toddlers had a special grasping toe that helped them hold on to their mothers and escape into the trees, reports a study published July 4 in Science Advances. The evidence comes from DIK-1-1 — a relatively complete 3.3 million-year-old skeleton of a 2.5- to 3-year-old female Australopithecus afarensisdiscovered in Dikika, Ethiopia. The skeleton, nicknamed Selam — after the word for peace in Ethiopia's official language of...
  • Ancient Fossil Child Discovered in Ethiopia [NPR]

    09/20/2006 4:21:21 PM PDT · by Wormwood · 29 replies · 747+ views
    National Public Radio ^ | September 20, 2006 | Christopher Joyce
    September 20, 2006 · Scientists in Ethiopia have discovered the skeleton of a 3.3 million years old child, the oldest child fossil on record. The fossil is known as the Dikika child, after the region where it was found. Though not a human, the apelike creature could walk upright. The child is from the same species as the famous fossil Lucy, which was also discovered in Ethiopia over 30 years ago. It was probably female, and about three when it died. The child lay within a sandstone tomb for over 3 million years. Six years ago, an Ethiopian scientist saw...