During a period approximately five to six million years ago, there was a global cooling event that resulted in the replacement of tropical forests in sub-Saharan Africa with savannahs. An evolutionary boom that coincided with the emergence of this novel habitat resulted in the creation of brand-new carnivorous and omnivorous species. Among them were the hominines, the precursors of contemporary humans.

Rundown
In 2000, a weighty revelation was made in Kenya, recommending the presence of the most seasoned human progenitor at any point. The fossils, named Ororin tugenensis, are accepted to be 5.8 to 6.1 million years of age. The age of the remains is still up in the air through a blend of dating the stone layers and breaking down the fossils of different creatures tracked down in a similar region. This revelation can possibly change how we interpret human development.

Key Points :

🌍 The foundations of humanity are covered in secrecy; howeverr a critical finding in Kenya proposes the presence of our most established human progenitor.
📅 The disclosure was made in 2000, and the fossils are accepted to be 5.8 to 6.1 million years of age.
🐾 The fossils were named Ororin tugenensis and were tracked down in a remote corner of Kenya.
📈 The age of the not entirely set in stone through dating the stone layers and dissecting the fossils of different creatures tracked down in a similar region.
🌱 This revelation can possibly change how we might interpret human development.
🧠 Understanding our earliest starting points is urgent to sorting out our family line and where we came from.
🔍 This tracking down features the difficulties and significance of looking for and deciphering fossil proof to uncover our transformative history.

https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/ancient/asbook02.asp

By swanthan1@gmail.com

Dr. S. Swaminathan is right now working as an Associate Professor in the Department of History at Thiruvalluvar Government Arts College, Rasipuram, Namakkal District. In advance, he has joined the Department of History at Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirappalli, for his postgraduate degree in history. Subsequently, he joined a full-time Ph.D. research program under the supervision and guidance of Professor N. Rajendran, Dean of Arts and Head, Department of History, Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirappalli, in 1999. His research topic is “Science in Colonial Tamil Nadu, A.D. 1900–A.D. 1947”. He has applied for and obtained the Indian Council of Historical Research-New Delhi Junior Research Fellowship, and as such, he has been an I.C.H.R. junior research fellow. He was awarded his Ph.D. thesis in 2007. He has exhibited research acumen and administrative skills during the period of his research. He has published many articles during his period of research. He got his current position from the Tamil Nadu Government Directorate of Collegiate Education, Chennai, through the selection of the Tamil Nadu Teachers Recruitment Board, Chennai, in 2008. He has organized a Tamil Nadu State Council for Higher Education-sponsored two-day state-level seminar on “Social Changes in Tamil Nadu Past and Present” held from April 5 and 6, 2010, and a two-day ICHR-sponsored national seminar on “History of Science and Technology in Tamil Nadu: Colonial Initiatives and Indian Response” held from August 26 and 27, 2010, in the auspicious Department of History, Thiruvalluvar Government Arts College, Rasipuram (637 401).

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *