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Home
Me?
Comics!
Rewriting the Western Hemisphere
Pre Sapien finds Western Hemisphere
Sapiens in Western Hemisphere 40,000+ bp
Things that make me wonder
Bibliographies
Hybrid Children
Homo Neanderthal
Homo Erectus
Homo Sapien
Biology of Sex
Medicine in the Ancients
Bad Durrenberg Shaman
Tattooing
Human Origins
Homo Naledi
Ghosts with in
New Humans!!!
European Ancestors
How Old is Old?
Rise of Violence
Who I can recommend
DNA Resources
Race
Books
More
Home
Me?
Comics!
Rewriting the Western Hemisphere
Pre Sapien finds Western Hemisphere
Sapiens in Western Hemisphere 40,000+ bp
Things that make me wonder
Bibliographies
Hybrid Children
Homo Neanderthal
Homo Erectus
Homo Sapien
Biology of Sex
Medicine in the Ancients
Bad Durrenberg Shaman
Tattooing
Human Origins
Homo Naledi
Ghosts with in
New Humans!!!
European Ancestors
How Old is Old?
Rise of Violence
Who I can recommend
DNA Resources
Race
Books
Bibliographies
Ancient infant ape skull sheds light on the ancestor of all humans and living apes
Exquisitely preserved fossil suggests that our ape forebears did come from Africa
Potential hominin affinities of Graecopithecus from the Late Miocene of Europe
The split of our own clade from the Panini is undocumented in the fossil record. To fill this gap we investigated the dentognathic morphology of Graecopithecus freybergi from Pyrgos Vassilissis (Greece) and cf. Graecopithecus sp. from Azmaka (Bulgaria), using new μCT and 3D reconstructions of the two known specimens. Pyrgos Vassilissis and Azmaka are currently dated to the early Messinian at 7.175 Ma and 7.24 Ma. Mainly based on its external preservation and the previously vague dating, Graecopithecus is often referred to as nomen dubium. The examination of its previously unknown dental root and pulp canal morphology confirms the taxonomic distinction from the significantly older northern Greek hominine Ouranopithecus. Furthermore, it shows features that point to a possible phylogenetic affinity with hominins. G. freybergi uniquely shares p4 partial root fusion and a possible canine root reduction with this tribe and therefore, provides intriguing evidence of what could be the oldest known hominin.
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