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Homo habilis: cranium

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Object Details

Discovered by

Peter Nzube

Is this an original object?

No

Age

About 1.8 million years old

Summary

The cranium was found crushed flat (hence the nickname) and cemented together with a coating of limestone. Little value was placed on the find originally, but after much effort by scientist Ron Clarke, the skull was reconstructed. Despite this effort, there still is a good deal of distortion from the fossilization process. The slightly small cranial capacity (just under 600 cubic centimeters) is attributed to this distortion. The face of the individual is prognathic (projects forward under the nose: see the third photograph down), as in other H. habilis individuals, but not quite to the extent of the earlier Australopithecus species. This specimen manifests the larger brain size and the reduction of facial size typical of the evolution of early Homo. The individual's third molars had erupted, so we know that Twiggy was an adult at death. Yet the molars show no sign of wear (the points on the crowns of her teeth are still sharp, and show little sign of abrasion by rough food matter), indicating that that this individual probably died soon after their eruption.

Date of discovery

1968

Original Object Identifier

OH 24

Original Object Holding Institution

National Museum of Tanzania

Location of Discovery

Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Site

Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Species

Homo habilis

Data Source

NMNH - Anthropology Dept.

Metadata Usage

CC0

Record ID

dpo_3d_200063

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