Talk:Australopithecus garhi

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Latest comment: 9 June 2024 by Florian Blaschke in topic Etymology
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File:Sciences humaines.svg This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 25 March 2020 and 12 June 2020. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Cgarc070. Peer reviewers: Radroni21, Lfay002.

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Dates

A lot of dates in the text are wrong, [1], for example the type specimen was first namend in 1999 (not 1997), and the skull has been found in 1997, not 1996. Haile-Selassi was the discoverer of the type-specimen, but he was not one of the authors of the publication ... --De.Gerbil 15:22, 27 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

OK, this *must* have been a joke

Someone wrote: "The remains are from the time when there are very few fossil records, between 2.0 and 3.0 million years ago. "

This is ridiculously wrong. You could fill a room with all of the hominid fossils from 3 to 2 million years ago. Several individuals of each of the following species have been found from this timeframe: Homo erectus Australopithecus africanus Paranthropus aethiopicus Homo habilis

and a few others. Additionally, I believe you should always say "3 to 2 million years ago". 2 to 3 sounds backwards, as the earlier date should come first. InterwebUsr (talk) 17:26, 9 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

Fossils of homonins before 2mya do tend to be rare. Since generally humans lived on the plains, scavengers and predators tended to eat their remains meaning bones were separated and broken. This makes for bad fossilisation. Also human population numbers were quite small at this point, meaning there were fewer people to get fossilised. COmpared to other genuses we have very few australopithecus fossils. Whoever wrote that is quite right (before you ask, it wasn't me).Wise zoologist (talk) 13:03, 16 May 2013 (UTC)Reply

Canines do not imply a carnivorous diet

Did someone really write that Australopithecines in the Afar became extinct because they were surrounded by vegetation and had no meat? Large canines males of extant primates and some hominins are generally considered to signal sexual dimorphism. This implies much about their social organization and reproductive strategies, but does not mean they were relying on meat, or even consuming it at all. In fact, most of the debate about Australopithecine diet revolves around which plant resources they were consuming and where they were getting them, be it tough, C4 plants like sedges and grasses, or soft fruits in more closed forest environments. Hominins likely weren't relying on meat until the emergence of the genus Homo (definitely by the appearance of Homo erectus). — Preceding unsigned comment added by Pantrog (talkcontribs) 23:23, 24 March 2013 (UTC)Reply

Earliest stone tools / Behavior and Environment

I removed a large chunk of text in this edit (added here and here). It could be used, but it must be cleanup up first (e.g. it should be Australopithecus garhi not Australopithecus Garhi; most references such as Denys et al., 1986; Pickford, 1990; Partridge et al. 1995, are not listed in the reference section or anywhere else). jonkerz ♠talk 07:15, 17 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

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Talk:Australopithecus garhi/GA1

Etymology

Very odd that a GA doesn't even tell us where the garhi epithet comes from. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 14:38, 9 June 2024 (UTC)Reply