This, for readers who have managed to maintain an interest in the ever widening palaeoanthropological African rifts:
A Nature Science Update report on a recent Science “article” by Tim White on the true meaning of the word “platypus”, as in “Kenyanthropus platypus”.
Flat-faced Man in family feud
Palaeontologist claims geology set human relative apart.
Nature Science Update, 28 March 2003
REX DALTON
A leading palaeontologist is questioning the heritage of a 3.5-million-year-old fossil skull hailed two years ago as a new human relative1. It's just one example, he suggests, of scientists being too quick to give us a bushy family tree.
The fossil hit the headlines in 2001 when Meave Leakey of National Museums of Kenya and colleagues described it as evidence of a new human-like lineage. They named their specimen Kenyanthropus platypus2 - literally, the 'Flat-faced Man of Kenya'.
Tim White of the University of California, Berkeley, now argues that K. platypus was more probably a Kenyan variant of one of the most famous human ancestors of all time - 'Lucy', discovered in Ethiopia in 1974. This fossil skeleton was formally named Australopithecus afarensis3.
Geology, not genes, gave the Flat-faced Man his distinctive looks, White reckons. Over time, he explains, fine-grained rock invaded tiny cracks in the skull and distorted its shape in an irregular way.
You can read the remainder of this short report
HEREThe original article:
White, T. 2003. Early Hominids - Diversity or Distortion? Science 299: 1994 – 1997. … can be read
HEREJacques Cinq-Mars