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Australopithecus sediba: No such thing as a missing link

- Wits University

Autralopithecus sediba is not the missing link that connects modern man to its more primitive ancestors.

The fossils that were found 10 years ago by Palaeoathropologist, Professor Lee Berger of the University of the Witwatersrand, and his son Matthew, at Malapa in the Cradle of Human Kind in South Africa, has recently been described as the so-called 鈥渕issing link鈥 in human evolution, after the publication of by a team of international researchers that confirmed the unique species status of Sediba. This research has been misinterpreted by some sectors, creating the idea that Australopithecus sediba might be the 鈥渕issing link鈥.

This perception is incorrect, as there is no such thing as a 鈥渕issing link鈥 in human evolution, says Professor Berger in an informative video, released by Wits University.

鈥淭he image of human evolution on T-shirts is incorrect. I would prefer that we forget the term 鈥榤issing link鈥,鈥 says Berger, who is currently on expedition at the Rising Star cave, also in the Cradle of Human kind, where the other famous human ancestor, Homo naledi, was found.

Berger explains that human evolution is not a linear process, where one species evolve into another, but rather follows a process similar to a braided stream, or river delta, where a stream might branch off into its own direction, or later flow back and join a different stream, which might 鈥渆volve鈥 into a new species.

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