Kimbel W H, Johanson D C, Rak Y
Institute of Human Origins, Berkeley, California 94709.
Nature. 1994 Mar 31;368(6470):449-51. doi: 10.1038/368449a0.
The Hadar Formation in Ethiopia is a prolific source of Pliocene Hominidae attributed to the species Australopithecus afarensis. Since 1990, three seasons of field work have contributed 53 new specimens to the hominid inventory from Hadar, including the first fairly complete adult skull. Ranging from 3.0 to 3.4 million years in age (Fig. 1), the new specimens bear on key debates in hominid palaeontology, including the taxonomic implications of sample variation and the reconstruction of locomotor behaviour. They confirm the taxonomic unity of A. afarensis and constitute the largest body of evidence for about 0.9 million years of stasis in the earliest known hominid species.
埃塞俄比亚的哈达尔地层是上新世人科动物的丰富来源,这些人科动物被归为阿法南方古猿物种。自1990年以来,三个野外工作季为哈达尔的人科动物清单增添了53个新标本,包括首个相当完整的成年头骨。新标本的年代在300万年至340万年之间(图1),它们与人类古生物学中的关键辩论相关,包括样本变异的分类学意义以及运动行为的重建。它们证实了阿法南方古猿的分类统一性,并构成了已知最早人类物种约90万年停滞期的最大证据。