• 11 hours ago
Lucy was discovered in 1974 in Ethiopia and when she was found 50 years ago, she was the oldest known human specimen in existence. The remains of the proto-human are 3.18-million-year-old and they continue to support new scientific investigations even to this day.
Transcript
00:00These are the 3.18 million year old remains of Lucy.
00:07She was discovered in 1974 in Ethiopia, and when she was found 50 years ago, she was the
00:12oldest known human specimen ever.
00:15Despite her short lifespan, believed to have been between 11 and 13 years of age at the
00:19time of her death, she breathed new life into the evolutionary study of our own species.
00:23Her discovery revealed that humans had existed beyond a more limited time frame, and provided
00:27a better understanding of how to assemble later human fossilized remains.
00:31Her deformed vertebrae also highlighted the evolving upright human stance, with experts
00:35saying she likely had back problems.
00:37For many of these reasons, she was nicknamed the grandmother of humanity.
00:41But despite her agedness, more, even older finds have been discovered since.
00:45One such find in Chad in 2001 included a human skull, which dated back some 6 or 7 million
00:50years.
00:51However, many experts continue to argue on exactly when humans emerged, and which skeletal
00:55fragments might belong to different hominid species.
00:58Still, Lucy's legacy continues, with new studies using new technologies divining new
01:03clues about our ancestor, with one investigation in 2016 determining she likely spent a lot
01:08of time in trees, and another study following it, suggesting she may have died after falling
01:13out of one.

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