• The hominin fossil record of the Omo-Turkana Basin

    From Pandora@pandora@knoware.nl to sci.anthropology.paleo on Fri Oct 31 15:31:13 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo

    The hominin fossil record of the Omo-Turkana Basin

    Abstract

    The Omo-Turkana Basin is one of three major regions for the study of
    hominin evolution in Africa. It has yielded a rich hominin fossil record
    of 1231 specimens, around a third of the record for the whole of Africa
    for the period from the Messinian through the Calabrian. Here, we
    consider the fossil hominin record of the Omo-Turkana Basin as an object
    of study in its own right and show the contribution that an analysis of
    such an exhaustive record can make. The data come from 117 publications allowing the most complete, accurate, and up-to-date synthesis of this
    record. Our analysis provides a quantitative perspective on the biases affecting this record, such as skeletal element abundance
    representation, chronostratigraphic distribution, and difficulties in taxonomic assignment. It also provides historical perspective,
    illustrating the major contribution made by the Omo-Turkana hominin
    fossil record to our knowledge of human evolution. We provide a
    synthetic overview of the taxa represented and discuss the chronological distribution of taxonomic groups in the basin including the relative
    abundance of Paranthropus and Homo (2/3 and 1/3, respectively) during
    their long period of coexistence. Integrating the data makes it possible
    to address difficult questions that have been underinvestigated until
    now. For example, contrary to the prevailing view, the genus Homo is
    well represented in the Omo-Turkana Basin between 2.7 and 2 Ma.
    Additionally, we show that the hominin fossil record of the Upper Burgi
    and KBS Members is atypical, both in terms of skeletal element abundance
    and taxonomy. Neither paleoenvironments nor taphonomic or collecting
    biases can fully explain this anomaly.

    Open access:
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2025.103731 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047248425000843
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