HomeScience & EnvironmentMystery owner of 3-million-year-old...

Mystery owner of 3-million-year-old foot found in Africa identified, scientists say

Newly discovered fossils prove that a mysterious foot found in Ethiopia belongs to a little-known, recently named ancient human relative who lived alongside the species of the famous Lucy, scientists said Wednesday.

The discovery is the latest twist in the tale of human evolution and could even cast some doubt on the status of Lucy’s species, Australopithecus afarensis, as the direct ancestor of Homo sapiens.

Until the foot was discovered in Burtele in northeastern Ethiopia in 2009, Lucy’s species was thought to be the only human relative living in the area more than three million years ago.

But the appendage clearly does not belong to Lucy’s species because it has an opposable toe — similar to a thumb — allowing its owner to grab onto tree branches like apes.

The team of scientists who found the mystery foot went on to name a new species, Australopithecus deyiremeda, in 2015 based on some roughly 3.4-million-year-old jaw bones found in Burtele.

The announcement was met with some skepticism in scientific circles. Due to the scarcity of fossils, attempts to add a new branch to the human family tree usually provoke fierce debate.

The team was also unable to say that the foot bones — dubbed the Burtele foot — belonged to their new species.

Now, in a study published Tuesday called “Mystery owner of African hominin foot identified,” the scientists announced that new fossils including a jawbone with 12 teeth found at the site show that the foot was that of A. deyiremeda.

“We have no doubt about the Burtele foot belonging to the same species as these teeth and the jaw,” lead study author, Yohannes Haile-Selassie of Arizona State University, told AFP.

This undated picture released by Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University shows the Burtele foot, which had been a mystery since being discovered in Afar Region in Ethiopia, in 2009, with its elements in the anatomical position. 

Yohannes HAILE-SELASSIE / Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University /AFP via Getty Images


The research also revealed more details about this species, offering further clues about who could have been the true ancestor of us Homo sapiens.

“Co-existence is deep in our ancestry”

A CT scan of the teeth suggested that A. deyiremeda was more primitive than its cousin Lucy, the study said.

Isotope analysis of the teeth meanwhile showed that its diet consisted mainly of leaves, fruit and nuts of trees.

The grasping big toe also suggested this human relative spent more time in the trees. Big toes played an important role in human evolution, allowing our ancestors to leave the trees behind and walk on two legs.

A lingering question about A. deyiremeda was how it could have co-existed with Lucy’s species at the same place and time, Haile-Selassie said.

The new research suggests that the former spent its time in the forest, more likely eating from trees, while the latter spent more time on the ground, a difference that allowed them to live together.

It also demonstrates that “co-existence is deep in our ancestry”, Haile-Selassie emphasised.

Earlier this year, in the same region where was Lucy was discovered, archaeologists found 3,000-million-year-old knives that are believed to be some of the first tools ever used on Earth.  Rick Potts, the director of the Smithsonian’s human origins program and the leader of research on the peninsula, told CBS News that discovery can help frame humans’ existence on the planet.

“We are the last biped standing, as I call it,” Potts said. “All of those other ways of life became extinct. And so that gives us a lot to think about, and it draws attention to the fragility of life, even in our own journey through time.” 

New technologies have made the sites easier to date, and new discoveries across eastern Africa have refined researchers’ understanding of human roots. Researchers knew that modern homo sapiens emerged in Africa about 300,000 years ago, but it wasn’t until recently that they understood that their hominin ancestors began walking on two legs at least 6 million years ago. 

Search for the identity of our true ancestor

John McNabb, a paleolithic archaeologist at the UK’s University of Southampton not involved in the study, praised the new research.

“There will always be sceptics, but I think these new finds, and their validation of older ones, will help many researchers to be more accepting of A. deyiremeda,” he told AFP.

It also “adds a new player into the mix” in the search for the identity of our true ancestor, McNabb added.

Because A. deyiremeda was more primitive and had a less human-like foot than Lucy, it is unlikely to dethrone her as the prime suspect in this search, both scientists agreed.

But the discovery “opens this possibility that we might still find more species within that time period because it looks like the Australopiths were experimenting with bipedality,” or walking on two legs, Haile-Selassie said.

CZECH-ETHIOPIA-SCIENCE-HISTORY-LUCY

The hyperrealistic artistic reconstruction of the female Austrolopithecus afarensis (Lucy), based on finds from Hadar, Ethiopia, in the National Museum of Prague on February 4, 2025 in Prague, is pictured.

MICHAL CIZEK/AFP via Getty Images


“Could there be another species which could be a better candidate to be the ancestor of the genus Homo?” he asked.

“We don’t know — it depends on what we find.”

Source link

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Most Popular

More from Author

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Read Now

Optical illusion: Even the smartest failed to spot the hidden rat, can you find it in 15 seconds?

A viral optical illusion challenges users to find a hidden rat in under 15 seconds, with most failing despite repeated attempts. This brain teaser highlights how visual clutter and camouflage can trick perception, sparking online debate. Psychologists note such puzzles test attention and visual processing, often...

What taxes apply to electric vehicles and when will new petrol and diesel cars be banned?

Katy Austin,Transport correspondent andPritti Mistry,Business reporterGetty ImagesA new pay-per-mile charge for electric vehicles (EVs) and some hybrid cars was announced in the Budget.All new cars will have to be electric or plug-in hybrid from 2030, when a ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars...

India’s $5 Trillion Economy Push Explained: Why Modi Govt Wants To Merge 12 Banks Into 4 Mega ‘World-Class’ Lending Giants | Economy News

India's Public Sector Banks Merger: The Centre is mulling over consolidating public-sector banks, and officials involved in the process say the long-term plan could eventually bring down the number of state-owned lenders from 12 to possibly just 4. The goal is to build a banking system that...

Three defiant nun sisters in 80s escape care home, break back into convent, secure stay

Three nuns in their 80s who made headlines after fleeing their care home to take back their convent in...

Chinese hackers use Anthropic’s Claude AI in major cyberattack campaign

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Cybersecurity has been reshaped by the rapid rise of advanced artificial intelligence tools, and recent incidents show just how quickly the threat landscape is shifting.Over the past year, we've seen a surge in attacks powered by AI...

British playwright Tom Stoppard, known for “Shakespeare in Love” screenplay, dies at 88

British playwright Tom Stoppard, who won an Academy Award for the screenplay for 1998's "Shakespeare In Love," has died. He was 88.United Agents said in a statement Saturday that Stoppard died "peacefully" at his home in Dorset in southern England, surrounded by his...

Residential sector: Tier II cities’ housing sales value rises 4%; strategic pause in launches keeps volumes lower, say analysts

Housing sales across India’s 15 major Tier II cities rose 4 per cent in value to Rs 37,409 crore in the July-September quarter of 2025, even as volumes declined, according to real estate analytics firm PropEquity. Sales fell 4 per cent year-on-year to 39,201 units...

Xochitl Gomez fuels Robert Irwin dating rumours after declaring single era

Dancing with the Stars champion Robert Irwin and Xochitl Gomez have neither confirmed nor denied dating rumours for a...

Flights disrupted as Airbus requests modifications to thousands of planes

Theo LeggettInternational Business CorrespondentGetty ImagesAirbus has warned flights will be disrupted after it requested immediate modifications to thousands of planes over the discovery that intense radiation from the sun could corrupt data crucial to flight controls.About 6,000 planes are thought to be affected, about half the European...