KNM-ER 992

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KNM ER 992
KNM-ER 992. REPLICA. MCN.jpg
KNM ER 992 replica
Catalog no.KNM ER 992
Species Homo ergaster
Age1.5 mya
Place discovered Koobi Fora, Kenya
Date discovered1971
Discovered by Richard Leakey
Originally thought to be Homo habilis ; reclassified as Homo ergaster in 1975

KNM ER 992 is a 1.5 million years old fossilized lower jaw discovered by Richard Leakey in 1971 at Lake Turkana, Kenya. The mandible was considered by C. Groves and V. Mazak to be the holotype specimen for Homo ergaster . [1] [2] [3]

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Homo ergaster is an extinct species or subspecies of archaic humans who lived in Africa in the Early Pleistocene. Whether H. ergaster constitutes a species of its own or should be subsumed into H. erectus is an ongoing and unresolved dispute within palaeoanthropology. Proponents of synonymisation typically designate H. ergaster as "African Homo erectus" or "Homo erectus ergaster". The name Homo ergaster roughly translates to "working man", a reference to the more advanced tools used by the species in comparison to those of their ancestors. The fossil range of H. ergaster mainly covers the period of 1.7 to 1.4 million years ago, though a broader time range is possible. Though fossils are known from across East and Southern Africa, most H. ergaster fossils have been found along the shores of Lake Turkana in Kenya. There are later African fossils, some younger than 1 million years ago, that indicate long-term anatomical continuity, though it is unclear if they can be formally regarded as H. ergaster specimens. As a chronospecies, H. ergaster may have persisted to as late as 600,000 years ago, when new lineages of Homo arose in Africa.

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References

  1. Groves, C. P.; Mazak, V. (1975). "An Approach to the Taxonomy of the Hominidae: Gracile Villafranchian Hominids of Africa". Casopis pro mineralogii a geologii. 20: 225–247.
  2. Tattersall (2015). "10 Homo ergaster and Its Contemporaries". In Henke, W.; Tattersall, I. (eds.). Handbook of Paleoanthropology. Berlin, Heidelberg. pp. 1634–1653.
  3. Heslip, Steven (2001). "Homo ergaster". Michigan State University. (broken link)