New Hominin Species Discovered: Australopithecus deyiremeda Coexisted with Lucy's Species, Offering Evolution Insights

November 26, 2025
New Hominin Species Discovered: Australopithecus deyiremeda Coexisted with Lucy's Species, Offering Evolution Insights
  • Woranso-Mille provides clear evidence that two related hominin species coexisted in the same region and period.

  • Dental and dietary data, together with foot morphology, imply that A. deyiremeda walked and foraged differently from A. afarensis, signaling diverse locomotion strategies among contemporaries.

  • New fossils from Woranso-Mille, Ethiopia, including a skull and jaw with 12 teeth, support assigning the Burtele foot to A. deyiremeda and indicate a diet biased toward trees, shrubs, fruits, and leaves rather than Lucy's species’ broader woodland diet.

  • The findings were published in Nature, providing formal evidence for coexistence and lifestyle differences between the two species.

  • The results reinforce the view that ancient ecosystems hosted multiple hominin lineages coexisting without immediate extinction pressures, highlighting diversity in locomotion and diet.

  • The discovery challenges a linear, single-line evolution narrative and supports the idea that several closely related hominins lived in close geographic proximity during the Pliocene.

  • Despite proximity in space and time, A. afarensis and A. deyiremeda may have minimized food competition by occupying different ecological niches.

  • CT scans and tooth development studies suggest juvenile growth patterns in A. deyiremeda were consistent with other early hominins, indicating shared growth biology.

  • The study, published in Nature, underscores diverse evolutionary paths and the coexistence of Deyiremeda and afarensis in overlapping habitats.

  • Experts say the discovery points to multiple experimental paths to bipedality in early hominins and prompts reevaluation of how coexisting species navigated shared environments.

  • The Burtele foot preserves a primitive structure with an opposable big toe suitable for tree climbing but capable of supporting upright walking, with propulsion mainly from the second toe.

  • A 3.4-million-year-old Burtele foot is linked to a new hominin species, Australopithecus deyiremeda, living in the same region and era as Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy).

Summary based on 8 sources


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