Just better. Italian paleoanthropologists found a primate skull at the site of Saccopastore in 1929.
1 Middle Pliocene hominin diversity: Australopithecus deyiremeda and Kenyanthropus platyops Fred Spoor1,2, Meave G. Leakey3,4 and Paul O’Higgins5 1 Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, UCL, London WC1E 6BT, UK. What was a major benefit of the discovery of the Dikika child skeleton?
a very flat face. ... Knowing the age of the TMRCA allows biologists to estimate population sizes in the past.
In 2005, a German team of archeochemists determined, based on carbon-14 dating, that the skull was between 80,000 and 120,000 years old.
Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. In Australopithecus …mya), Orrorin tugenensis (6 mya), Ardipithecus kadabba (5.8–5.2 mya), and Ar. 3 Turkana Basin Institute, PO Box 24926 Nairobi 00502, Kenya. Quite the same Wikipedia. What is the most distinctive feature of Kenyanthropus platyops and part of the reason it was placed in its own genus?
2 Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig 04103, Germany.
The oldest known stone tools—deliberately flaked blades—date back 3.3 million years and are attributed to either Australopithecus afarensis or Kenyanthropus platyops… What we do.
2001 New hominin genus from eastern Africa shows diverse middle Pliocene lineages. Just better. Leakey M.G. et al. Kenyanthropus. Kenyanthropus platyops is a 3.5 to 3.2-million-year-old hominin fossil discovered in Lake Turkana, Kenya in 1999 by Justus Erus, who was part of Meave Leakey's team.. Archaeological discoveries in Lomekwi in 2015, identifying possibly the oldest known evidence of hominin use of tools to date, have indicated that Kenyanthropus platyops may have been the earliest tool-users known.
Nature Vol 410:433-440
Kenyanthropus platyops is believed to have lived in a mixed habitat of grassland and woodland, similar to sites where Australopithecus afarensis have been found from deposits of a similar age elsewhere.
ramidus (5.8–4.4 mya)—that is, pre-Australopithecus species that are considered to be ancient humans—and one additional species of early human, Kenyanthropus platyops (3.5 mya).