Homo sapiens idaltu
Homo sapiens idaltu is an extinct subspecies of Homo sapiens. They lived almost 160,000 years ago in Africa during the Pleistocene period. Idaltu is the Afar word for "elder, first born".
Archaic Humans Temporal range: Pleistocene
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Subspecies: | †H. s. idaltu
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†Homo sapiens idaltu White et al., 2003
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The fossilized remains of H. s. idaltu were discovered in Ethiopia's Afar Triangle in 1997. The region has volcanic layers. By using radiometric dating, the layers date between 154,000 and 160,000 years old. Three well preserved crania (top part of skulls) were discovered, the best preserved being from an adult male (BOU-VP-16/1) with a brain capacity of 1,450 cm3 (88 cu in).
Later, another even earlier version of Homo sapiens was found by a team led by Richard Leakey. These remains were from Omo National Park, Ethiopia. A 2005 potassium-argon dating of volcanic tuff associated with the remains showed them to date from about 195,000 years ago, even older than the idaltu fossils. These Omo remains are the earliest known remains of 'anatomically modern humans', that is, modern man.[1] Leakey and his team have not given the remains a subspecific name. They are just called "Omo remains of Homo sapiens".
Homo Sapiens Idaltu Media
Skhul 5 (above) is anatomically similar to Herto Man.
Cast of the left side of BOU-VP-16/1 at the National Museum of Ethiopia
Stone tools from Herto (left), the Omo 2 skull (middle), and the juvenile BOU-VP-16/5 skull (right) at the National Museum of Ethiopia
References
- ↑ McDougall, I.; Brown, F.H.; Fleagle, J.G. (2005), "Stratigraphic placement and age of modern humans from Kibish, Ethiopia" (PDF), Nature, 433 (7027): 733–736, Bibcode:2005Natur.433..733M, doi:10.1038/nature03258, PMID 15716951, S2CID 1454595