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You are here: Home > History: The Cradle of Mankind
HISTORY: THE CRADLE OF MANKIND (4,400,000 B.C.-50,000 B.C.) ![]() n 1911, the german enthomologist prof. Kattwinkel fell down a ravine while he was pursuing an unusual butterfly. The place was Olduvai Gorge, in Serengeti. The fall was hard, but the scientist somehow managed to save his life. Then he raised his eyes, and only a scientist would have appreciated that the rocky wall was an extraordinary fossil bed... And this changed the conception man had of his own origin. To tell the history of Kenya, we must go right to the start, to the dawn of mankind.
The quest for the "missing link" between man and ape obsessed the Dutch anthropologist Eugène Dubois, who contributed the first evidence for the existence of Pithecanthropus when in 1893 discovered the Man from Java, or Pithecanthropus erectus. The trends of the time, based on this primeval evidence and the Lemuria hypothesis, located the birthplace of Mankind in the Asian continent. Meanwhile, Kattwinkel acted his famous stumble, but it would not be until 1924 that Darwin's theory, which located the "cradle of Mankind" in Africa, started to gain empirical support. That year, Dart and Broom unearthed in South Africa the fossil remains of a pre-hominid, Australopithecus africanus, whose age was estimated to be 2 million years, one million older than Dubois' ape-man. New findings started to outline the genealogy of this new genera, of which its possible role as an ancestor of modern man kept on generating discussion during the first three decades of the 20th century. The 70's and 80's yielded a boost in paleoanthropological knowledge. Mary Leakey described footprints and fossils of 3.6 million old hominids who lived in the Laetoli area, near Olduvai. On the other hand, her son Richard, with the cooperation of the Kenyan paleonthologist Bernard Ngeneo, explored the Koobi Fora site, close to Lake Turkana, discovering remains of Homo habilis dated 2 million years back. More northwards, Don Johanson and Tim White unearthed in Ethiopia the skeleton of a creature they named Lucy, a female Australopithecus 3.5 million years old, which became the most ancient species of australopithecins known so far: Australopithecus afarensis. Ten years later, in 1984, Richard Leakey achieved a nearly complete reconstruction of a Homo erectus skeleton, the famous "Turkana boy", a 1.6 million year old hominid, more evolved according to his cranial capacity and formerly considered a possible direct ancestor of Homo sapiens sapiens, the modern man. Dubois' Pithecanthropus was assimilated to this same species. Whilst new australopithecin species were described and the pieces were starting to fall into place, research allowed to draw a panorama which was yet diffuse. Until little more than one million years ago, hominids and pre-hominids were restricted to Southern and Eastern Africa. The two main evolutionary divergent branches, Australopithecus and Homo, coexisted until Australopithecus, more primitive, became extinct. One million years ago, a few pioneering Homo erectus clans emigrated to Asia. During these early migrations, one Homo erectus reached the Solo river banks, in Java, just to die and be finally discovered, one million years later, by an inquisitive and entrepreneurial scientist named Eugène Dubois.
Concerning the origins of modern man, Homo sapiens, our foreparents saw the light some 100,000-140,000 years ago and populated the planet. However, our ancestors' biography is far from complete. Though the study of fossil remains finds today an invaluable support in molecular biology, the book of Mankind's history still has many blank pages. H. erectus, who became extinct 100,000 years ago and was formerly considered a direct predecessor of man, seems to be actually a blind alley of a previous species, H. ergaster, who was a true ancestor of ours. This species was probably a precursor of the Europeans H. heidelbergensis or "Heidelberg Man", extinct some 200,000 years ago, and his successor H. neanderthalensis or "Neanderthal Man", who coexisted with H. sapiens and disappeared only 30,000 years ago. But the evolutionary line between our grandfather H. ergaster and us is a matter of discussion among the scientific community, that holds two opposed theories.
In this exciting context, and despite we are getting closer to meet our foreparents, paleoanthropologists have not yet achieved to precise which species can be considered as the common ancestors to man and modern apes. Yet today, this primeval man-ape sleeps somewhere beneath the African soil, in a continent which is someway still "Territory Unexplored".
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