An important discovery of Kenyanthropus platyops - The discovery of the Kenyan planer in the semi-desert area on the west coast of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya can provide a bold new meaning to the origin of mankind. This discovery is a very early primitive human skull that shows the features of modern people and early, more primitive ancestral facial features. The findings can be traced back to about 5 million years ago and once considered to be an era dominated by human ancestors without the obvious and unique features that modern people possess.
In 1999, Meave Leakey (and the wife of Richard), the Department of Paleontology in Kenya National Museum (NMK), led the family tradition by heading the Kenyan human platyops team (the male of the plane from Kenya) I continued. Orolin was discovered. The history of Kenyanthropus founded by African team member Justus Erus dates from 350 years back to 320 million years ago and was officially announced in 2001. Several people saw Homohoviris' predecessor on a rustic primitive face. Else found his findings on the west side of Turkana Lake along the Romekwi River.
An important discovery of Kenyanthropus platyops - The discovery of the Kenyan planer in the semi-desert area on the west coast of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya can provide a bold new meaning to the origin of mankind. This discovery is a very early primitive human skull that shows the features of modern people and early, more primitive ancestral facial features. - Sahelanthropus The meaning of Tchadensis (Toumai) is relatively short compared to the complete life history of the earth. There are billions of years of history on the earth, and organisms may appear between 20 and 4 billion years ago. Various kinds of animals live on the earth for hundreds of millions of years.
Meave Meave Leakey recently discovered some of the skull and squat five million years ago in 1999. It is believed to belong to a new branch of the early primitive Kenyanthropus platyops (Kenya plane), and it left a deep impression on the world. This amazing discovery announced in Nature magazine will affect widespread in understanding the origin of mankind. The New York Times wrote on 22 March 2001 that the report on its top page may have overturned the general view that "discovery" has only one strain in the early stages of human family lines.