Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
‘Real Housewives’ and Broadway star Kandi Burruss on her spring break packing list 

‘Real Housewives’ and Broadway star Kandi Burruss on her spring break packing list 

March 18, 2026
Sean Penn Awarded Honorary Oscar Made of Metal After Skipping 2026 Academy Awards for Ukraine Trip

Sean Penn Awarded Honorary Oscar Made of Metal After Skipping 2026 Academy Awards for Ukraine Trip

March 18, 2026
Lamar Odom pleads not guilty in Las Vegas DUI case

Lamar Odom pleads not guilty in Las Vegas DUI case

March 18, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • ‘Real Housewives’ and Broadway star Kandi Burruss on her spring break packing list 
  • Sean Penn Awarded Honorary Oscar Made of Metal After Skipping 2026 Academy Awards for Ukraine Trip
  • Lamar Odom pleads not guilty in Las Vegas DUI case
  • Top 9 Anti-Amazon fitness deals: Where to shop to save more
  • Angry all the time in your 40s? It could be ‘perimenopause rage’
  • Creepy, new Tinder feature wants all access to your photo library — and to spy on your most intimate moments
  • Wholesale inflation hits highest level in a year — and Iran war is fueling more rising prices fears
  • California Dems react to Chavez child rape claims as Newsom is yet to adress scandal
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Tiny bump on 7 million-year-old fossil suggests ancient ape walked upright — and might even be a human ancestor
Tiny bump on 7 million-year-old fossil suggests ancient ape walked upright — and might even be a human ancestor
Science

Tiny bump on 7 million-year-old fossil suggests ancient ape walked upright — and might even be a human ancestor

News RoomBy News RoomJanuary 9, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

The discovery of a never-before-seen bump on the leg bone of a 7 million-year-old fossil ape shows it walked upright on two legs while it was on the ground, a new study finds.

Only members of the human lineage have this lump, called the femoral tubercle. That makes the species, Sahelanthropus tchadensis, the earliest known hominin, according to the study, published Jan. 2 in the journal Science Advances. (Hominins are the group of species, including humans, that existed after the split from chimpanzees and bonobos. Walking upright on two legs is a defining characteristic of hominins.)

“That [bump] really sold it to us,” study lead author Scott A. Williams, an associate professor of paleoanthropology at New York University, told Live Science. “That really convinced me that, OK, we think it’s a biped, and therefore, we think it’s a member of the hominin lineage.”


You may like

The reanalysis of S. tchadensis‘ femur also confirmed two more human-like anatomical features. First, the bone twisted inward, placing the knees closer together than the hips, as in modern humans. Second, there was a distinct lump on the side of the fossil where the largest glute muscle attaches, which isn’t found in living nonhuman apes.

S. tchadesis‘ curved arm bones suggest that, like modern-day chimps and bonobos, the species was adapted to climbing trees. But its hips and knees functioned like those of hominins which suggests the ape frequently walked bipedally while on the ground.

“I think it must have been on the ground a significant amount of the time in order to evolve bipedalism,” Williams said.

A hotly debated fossil

Discovered in modern-day Chad, S. tchadensis was first described in 2002 and remains highly controversial. The authors of that study claimed the fossil ape was the earliest known hominin based on the position of the opening in the skull where the spinal cord attaches, called the foramen magnum. The opening was in the middle of the skull, which suggests the ape stood upright like humans do, but others argued that positioning didn’t prove S. tchadensis walked on two feet.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Twenty years later, two forearm bones, or ulnae, and a femur fragment belonging to S. tchadensis were revealed. The authors argued that the femur belonged to an ape that walked on two legs. But other scientists disagreed with this assessment, stating that the thigh bone shape did not indicate frequent bipedality.

Williams said he was on the fence about S. tchadensis being bipedal — and, therefore, a hominin — because it is “really old.” The ape lived around the time scientists believe the last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees lived, approximately 6 million to 7 million years ago. Rather than being a hominin, S. tchadensis may have been an ancient ape more closely related to chimps and bonobos than to humans, he explained.

Because he was interested in the answer either way, Williams and his team inspected the 3D scans of limb bones. They looked at various hallmark features on the femur and compared them to the thigh bones of all living and extinct ape species for which these bones exist.


You may like

This analysis revealed that the size and shape of S. tchadensis’ ulna and femur resembled those of modern-day chimps and bonobos. “We were getting a very great-ape signal,” Williams said.

But there were key differences that convinced the team that this ape was bipedal. Their analyses confirmed the presence of an inwardly twisted femur shaft and the attachment for the largest glute muscle, both linked to a hominin way of moving.

Critically, however, they spotted something no one had previously noticed: a tiny bump on the top front of the femur. “It’s a very subtle little bump that I actually didn’t identify initially by looking at the fossil but by rubbing my thumb along it and bumping into it,” Williams said. The team then verified that the original S. tchadensis fossil also had this lump.

“It’s beyond convincing,” Jeremy DeSilva, a biological anthropologist at Dartmouth College who was not involved in the research, told Live Science. “I immediately pulled this [the femur 3D scan] out and said, ‘Wait, how did I not see this?’ And sure as day, some of the key anatomies that they point out in this paper, I can see in this fossil,” he said. “I’m kind of kicking myself. I wish I had seen these things.”

This research makes the question of what the last common ancestor between humans and chimpanzees looked like “even more puzzling and fascinating,” DeSilva said.

If S. tchadensis was a hominin, it could suggest, as Williams believes, that this ancestor was more chimpanzee-like than human-like. However, DeSilva said S. tchadensis could potentially be a bipedal ape not on the human lineage.

“So the question we now have as a field that we have to contend with is,” he said, “can you be bipedal and not be a hominin? Is that possible?”


Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Top 9 Anti-Amazon fitness deals: Where to shop to save more

Top 9 Anti-Amazon fitness deals: Where to shop to save more

‘Parasites of human societies’: How did we end up so close to cats?

‘Parasites of human societies’: How did we end up so close to cats?

New AI image generator runs using 10 times fewer steps than today’s best models — and it’s coming to smartphones and laptops

New AI image generator runs using 10 times fewer steps than today’s best models — and it’s coming to smartphones and laptops

Enjoy “Born to be Wild” anywhere with this best-ever ExpressVPN deal

Enjoy “Born to be Wild” anywhere with this best-ever ExpressVPN deal

7 deep-sky targets we think you should observe this spring

7 deep-sky targets we think you should observe this spring

Best sports earbuds 2026: Tried and tested by a personal trainer

Best sports earbuds 2026: Tried and tested by a personal trainer

Diagnostic dilemma: A man’s back pain led to the discovery of a third kidney

Diagnostic dilemma: A man’s back pain led to the discovery of a third kidney

Live Science Today: Super El Niño looms and Starlink hits 10,000 satellites in orbit

Live Science Today: Super El Niño looms and Starlink hits 10,000 satellites in orbit

Colorectal cancer is now the most common cause of cancer deaths in the US for people under 50

Colorectal cancer is now the most common cause of cancer deaths in the US for people under 50

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Sean Penn Awarded Honorary Oscar Made of Metal After Skipping 2026 Academy Awards for Ukraine Trip

Sean Penn Awarded Honorary Oscar Made of Metal After Skipping 2026 Academy Awards for Ukraine Trip

March 18, 2026
Lamar Odom pleads not guilty in Las Vegas DUI case

Lamar Odom pleads not guilty in Las Vegas DUI case

March 18, 2026
Top 9 Anti-Amazon fitness deals: Where to shop to save more

Top 9 Anti-Amazon fitness deals: Where to shop to save more

March 18, 2026
Angry all the time in your 40s? It could be ‘perimenopause rage’

Angry all the time in your 40s? It could be ‘perimenopause rage’

March 18, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Creepy, new Tinder feature wants all access to your photo library — and to spy on your most intimate moments

Creepy, new Tinder feature wants all access to your photo library — and to spy on your most intimate moments

March 18, 2026
Wholesale inflation hits highest level in a year — and Iran war is fueling more rising prices fears

Wholesale inflation hits highest level in a year — and Iran war is fueling more rising prices fears

March 18, 2026
California Dems react to Chavez child rape claims as Newsom is yet to adress scandal

California Dems react to Chavez child rape claims as Newsom is yet to adress scandal

March 18, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.