| Themes > Science > Life Sciences > Physical Anthropology > Human Organic Evolution > Fossil Record > Australopithecus Afarensis |
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Among those discovered at Hadar was Lucy, a nearly complete (40%) skeleton of an Australopithecus Afarensis. Weighing about 60 pounds and standing about 3 and 1/2 feet high, Lucy lived about 2.9 million years ago when the eastern region of Africa was semiarid savanna with rainy and dry seasons. Lucy was discovered in 1974 by Tim White and Donald Johanson. Lucy and other skeletons found helped scientists to draw a clearer picture of what these early humans looked like. They were short, the tallest male probably reaching less than five feet, with extremely thick bones, and elongated back and short legs. The hands and feet were probably more similiar to apes than modern man, but the big toe appears to lack the grasping ability common to apes. The orientation of the pelvis allowed A. Afarensis to walk upright, though the length and grasp of their arms allowed them to continue to move through the trees. |
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