Kenyanthropus platyops
KNMWT 40000
Age approx. 3.50 Million Years Digital Capture: Photogrammetry

Not a member yet? Join now!

Join the community and you can start printing 3D models, saving your favorite fossils, and more!

or

Already a member? Log In!

x

Create a new collection

Add

Жилетка adidas р , IetpShops , Τυπωμένο σχέδιο adidas

reviews on air jordan outlet

nike air jordan 1 outlet

LEGO Air Jordan Flight Fleece Pants , air jordan 1 mid se take flight , IetpShops

Yeezy 700 Hi Res Blue Archives , girls adidas black hoodie pants , Cheap Aspennigeria Jordan Outlet

Excavation

Timeline

3D Models

The Lab

African Fossils Forum

Forum

It is said that the last two weeks of a field season is when the best fossils are found! This was the case in 1999 when fossil hunter Justus Edung spotted a scrappy piece of the upper jaw at a site called Lomekwi, LO5. The field team was spending the final day of the 1999 field expedition at that site. Because the recovery of hominins at Lomekwi had been largely rather disappointing, the plan was to then move back to the east side of the lake to reprospect the sites there. The fossil was in terrible shape as it had been preserved in a clay substrate. Clay expands and contracts as it soaks and dries during wet and dry seasons. This causes the substrate and its contents to crack, so fossils found in clays are often cracked and broken. Careful excavation by Meave Leakey led to the recovery a fragile and distorted cranium, which was then cleaned in the museum, over a period of nine months by Christopher Kiarie, before it could be studied and compared to other hominids from this age. This specimen is important as it provides evidence of diversity in the hominin fossil record extended further back in time over 3 million years. It is a more likely ancestor for Homo rudolfensis (KNM-ER 1470) than Australopithecus afarensis is. It was named Kenyanthropus in recognition of the contribution that Kenya has made to the hominin fossil record and platyops because of the very flat appearance of its face.

Disclaimer

The specimens displayed on this site are published specimens unless otherwise indicated. The information about the artifacts on this site is of a general nature only and unless otherwise indicated, has been written either by members of the African Fossils team, the National Museums of Kenya or the Turkana Basin Institute. The printed models are not of a high enough resolution to enable accurate scientific measurements and have generated using photogrammetry and in some cases low resolution digital models have been generated using laser scanners.

The information in this site is subject to change without notice.

Terms and Conditions

All copyright for the images and 3D models on this page belong to African Fossils and National Museums of Kenya and are made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike License.

THE COMMERCIAL USE OF AFRICAN FOSSILS MEDIA IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED