What did Lucy look like?

What did Lucy look like? With a mixture of ape and human features—including long dangling arms but pelvic, spine, foot, and leg bones suited to walking upright—slender Lucy stood three and a half feet (107 centimeters) tall.
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How do we know that Lucy was a female?

How do we know Lucy was a female? Johanson hypothesized almost immediately that Lucy was a female because of her small size. He was knowledgeable about fossil hominin discoveries made by other researchers, in other parts of Africa, in decades prior to the Lucy discovery.
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What did Lucy the fossil look like?

A cast of Lucy on display in the Museum's Human Evolution gallery. Her small skull, long arms and conical rib cage are like an ape's, but she has a more human-like spine, pelvis and knee due to walking upright. Johanson thought Lucy was either a small member of the genus Homo or a small australopithecine.
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What race was Lucy the first human?

On November 24, 1974, fossils of one of the oldest known human ancestors, an Australopithecus afarensis specimen nicknamed “Lucy,” were discovered in Hadar, Ethiopia.
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How was Lucy the first human found?

Lucy was found by Donald Johanson and Tom Gray on November 24, 1974, at the site of Hadar in Ethiopia. They had taken a Land Rover out that day to map in another locality. After a long, hot morning of mapping and surveying for fossils, they decided to head back to the vehicle.
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7 Things you must know about Lucy|The Grandmother of humanity|The oldest discovered hominid



Was Lucy an ape?

Perhaps the world's most famous early human ancestor, the 3.2-million-year-old ape "Lucy" was the first Australopithecus afarensis skeleton ever found, though her remains are only about 40 percent complete (photo of Lucy's bones). Discovered in 1974 by paleontologist Donald C. Johanson in Hadar, Ethiopia, A.
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What is the oldest body ever found?

Some of the oldest human remains ever unearthed are the Omo One bones found in Ethiopia. For decades, their precise age has been debated, but a new study argues they're around 233,000 years old.
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Who was the first human ever?

The First Humans

One of the earliest known humans is Homo habilis, or “handy man,” who lived about 2.4 million to 1.4 million years ago in Eastern and Southern Africa.
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What was Lucy's diet?

Lucy probably ate a mix of foods, including ripe fruits, nuts, and tubers from both the forest and savanna. Incisor teeth are typically used to prepare the food for mastication (think about biting off a piece of an apple), and molar teeth are used to masticate, or chew, the food into a small pulp that can be swallowed.
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Was Lucy a human?

AL 288-1, commonly known as Lucy, is a collection of several hundred pieces of fossilized bone representing 40 percent of a female of the hominin species Australopithecus afarensis. In Ethiopia, the assembly is also known as Dinkinesh, which means "you are marvelous" in Amharic.
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How old was Lucy the human chimp when she died?

Lucy remained visibly under-weight and possibly, as a consequence of this, had not reproduced by the time of her death at 21 years old. (Chimpanzees normally first give birth at about 13-14 years old.)
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Where was the first human found?

The oldest known evidence for anatomically modern humans are fossils found at Jebel Irhoud, Morocco, which date back some 360,000 years ago.
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How old was Lucy the skeleton when she died?

Also like chimps, early hominids matured at an earlier age than modern humans: Lucy's skeleton and teeth show that she had reached maturity even though she was only around 15 or 16 years old when she died. She measured 3 feet 6 inches tall and weighed 60 pounds.
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What was Lucy's gender?

Despite the uncertainties, Lovejoy said Lucy was most likely female. "The reason we know she's female is that she's the smallest of the species that's ever been found," he told NBC News.
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What did Australopithecus look like?

afarensis had both ape and human characteristics: members of this species had apelike face proportions (a flat nose, a strongly projecting lower jaw) and braincase (with a small brain, usually less than 500 cubic centimeters -- about 1/3 the size of a modern human brain), and long, strong arms with curved fingers ...
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Did a africanus use tools?

africanus were using other types of tools, like bones or pieces of wood. Or they might have been using their strong precision grips to get at food in new ways, such as peeling tough skins off fruit – a task that chimps tend to do with their teeth.
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Did Australopithecus eat meat?

The ancestral Australopithecus consumed a wide range of foods, including, meat, leaves and fruits. This varied diet might have been flexible to shift with food availability in different seasons, ensuring that they almost always had something to eat.
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What color was the first human?

Color and cancer

These early humans probably had pale skin, much like humans' closest living relative, the chimpanzee, which is white under its fur. Around 1.2 million to 1.8 million years ago, early Homo sapiens evolved dark skin.
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How did humans come from fish?

There is nothing new about humans and all other vertebrates having evolved from fish. The conventional understanding has been that certain fish shimmied landwards roughly 370 million years ago as primitive, lizard-like animals known as tetrapods.
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Will humans go extinct?

Scientists estimate modern humans have been around about 200,000 years, so that should give us at least another 800,000 years. Other scientists believe we could be here another two million years…or even millions of years longer. On the other hand, some scientists believe we could be gone in the next 100 years.
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Do humans come from monkeys?

Humans and monkeys are both primates. But humans are not descended from monkeys or any other primate living today. We do share a common ape ancestor with chimpanzees. It lived between 8 and 6 million years ago.
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Are humans still evolving?

Has it stopped already? Genetic studies have demonstrated that humans are still evolving. To investigate which genes are undergoing natural selection, researchers looked into the data produced by the International HapMap Project and the 1000 Genomes Project.
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What is the oldest mummy found?

The bodies of the Chinchorro mummies from coastal Chile, long believed to be the world's oldest mummies, were intentionally preserved by the region's hunter-gatherers around 7,000 years ago.
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Is Lucy a gorilla?

Lucy (1964–1987) was a chimpanzee owned by the Institute for Primate Studies in Oklahoma, and raised by Maurice K. Temerlin, a psychotherapist and professor at the University of Oklahoma and his wife, Jane.
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Who was the first human that died?

The first person to die is Abel at the hands of his brother, which is also the first time that blood is mentioned in the Bible (4:10–11).
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