Reconstructing the detailed dietary behaviour of extinct hominins is challenging1—particularly for a species such as Australopithecus africanus, which has a highly variable dental morphology that suggests a broad diet2,3. The dietary responses of extinct hominins to seasonal fluctuations in food availability are poorly understood, and nursing behaviours even less so; most of the direct information currently available has been obtained from high-resolution trace-element geochemical analysis of Homo sapiens (both modern and fossil), Homo neanderthalensis4 and living apes5. Here we apply high-resolution trace-element analysis to two A. africanus specimens from Sterkfontein Member 4 (South Africa), dated to 2.6–2.1 million years ago. Elemental ...
The stable carbon isotope ratio of fossil tooth enamel carbonate is determined by the photosynthetic...
Carbon isotope studies of early hominins from southern Africa showed that their diets differed marke...
NoIn an earlier study, stress lines in primate teeth were found to occur on a recurrent basis, proba...
Reconstructing the detailed dietary behaviour of extinct hominins is challenging1—particularly for a...
Reconstructing the detailed dietary behaviour of extinct hominins is challenging1\u2014particularly ...
International audienceNursing is pivotal in the social and biological evolution of hominins, but to ...
Direct evidence regarding when and to what degree our early ancestors incorporated animal resources ...
NoDietary ecology is one key to understanding the biology, lifeways, and evolutionary pathways of ma...
International audienceThe dichotomy between early Homo and Paranthropus is justified partly on morph...
Reconstructing the life histories of extinct hominins remains one of the main foci of paleoanthropol...
SIGNIFICANCE: Clumped and stable isotope data of paleosol carbonate and fossil tooth enamel inform a...
NoThe environmental contexts of the karstic hominin sites in South Africa have been established larg...
There is much debate on the dietary adaptations of the robust hominin lineages during the Pliocene-P...
Though late Middle Pleistocene in age, Homo naledi is characterized by a mosaic of Australopithecus-...
The stable carbon isotope ratio of fossil tooth enamel carbonate is determined by the photosynthetic...
Carbon isotope studies of early hominins from southern Africa showed that their diets differed marke...
NoIn an earlier study, stress lines in primate teeth were found to occur on a recurrent basis, proba...
Reconstructing the detailed dietary behaviour of extinct hominins is challenging1—particularly for a...
Reconstructing the detailed dietary behaviour of extinct hominins is challenging1\u2014particularly ...
International audienceNursing is pivotal in the social and biological evolution of hominins, but to ...
Direct evidence regarding when and to what degree our early ancestors incorporated animal resources ...
NoDietary ecology is one key to understanding the biology, lifeways, and evolutionary pathways of ma...
International audienceThe dichotomy between early Homo and Paranthropus is justified partly on morph...
Reconstructing the life histories of extinct hominins remains one of the main foci of paleoanthropol...
SIGNIFICANCE: Clumped and stable isotope data of paleosol carbonate and fossil tooth enamel inform a...
NoThe environmental contexts of the karstic hominin sites in South Africa have been established larg...
There is much debate on the dietary adaptations of the robust hominin lineages during the Pliocene-P...
Though late Middle Pleistocene in age, Homo naledi is characterized by a mosaic of Australopithecus-...
The stable carbon isotope ratio of fossil tooth enamel carbonate is determined by the photosynthetic...
Carbon isotope studies of early hominins from southern Africa showed that their diets differed marke...
NoIn an earlier study, stress lines in primate teeth were found to occur on a recurrent basis, proba...