Authors
Karol Galik, Brigitte Senut, Martin Pickford, Dominique Gommery, Jacques Treil, Adam J Kuperavage, Robert B Eckhardt
Publication date
2004/9/3
Journal
Science
Volume
305
Issue
5689
Pages
1450-1453
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Late Miocene fossils from the Lukeino Formation in Kenya's Tugen Hills are assigned to Orrorin tugenensis. Of 20 fossils recovered there to date, 3 are proximal femurs. One of these, BAR 1002′00, preserves an intact head connected to the proximal shaft by an elongated neck. Although this fossil is comparable in size to Pan troglodytes, computerized tomography scans of the neck-shaft junction of BAR 1002′00 reveal that the cortex is markedly thinner superiorly than inferiorly, differing from the approximately equal cortical thicknesses observed in extant African apes, approaching the condition in later hominids, and indicating that O. tugenensis was bipedal.
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