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
Incumbent Rep. Dan Crenshaw loses Texas GOP primary race

Incumbent Rep. Dan Crenshaw loses Texas GOP primary race

March 4, 2026
Cleveland, Ohio police find 2 girls dead in suitcases buried in shallow graves

Cleveland, Ohio police find 2 girls dead in suitcases buried in shallow graves

March 4, 2026
Madeline Ross Dead: Popular Streamer Adin Ross’ Sister Was 36, Medical Examiner Confirms

Madeline Ross Dead: Popular Streamer Adin Ross’ Sister Was 36, Medical Examiner Confirms

March 4, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Incumbent Rep. Dan Crenshaw loses Texas GOP primary race
  • Cleveland, Ohio police find 2 girls dead in suitcases buried in shallow graves
  • Madeline Ross Dead: Popular Streamer Adin Ross’ Sister Was 36, Medical Examiner Confirms
  • Jonathan Drouin, Ryan Pulock questionable for Islanders’ matchup with Ducks
  • Heated GOP Texas Senate primary heads to runoff between Cornyn and Paxton
  • United States and Ecuador launch joint operations against narco-terrorists
  • 3 Most Popular Netflix Movies Right Now (March 3-7): ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ and More
  • Harrison Barnes’ 364-game ironman streak ends after he woke up from nap with ankle injury
  • 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 » Most complete Homo habilis skeleton ever found dates to more than 2 million years ago and retains ‘Lucy’-like features
Most complete Homo habilis skeleton ever found dates to more than 2 million years ago and retains ‘Lucy’-like features
Science

Most complete Homo habilis skeleton ever found dates to more than 2 million years ago and retains ‘Lucy’-like features

News RoomBy News RoomJanuary 14, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

Paleoanthropologists have announced the world’s most complete skeleton of Homo habilis, a human ancestor that lived more than 2 million years ago in northern Kenya. The collection of fossil bones has revealed unusually strong arms that distinguished H. habilis from later species.

The bones were initially found in 2012 by a team of researchers led by Meave Leakey, of the Turkana Basin Institute, and were subsequently announced in 2015 at a research conference. Now, the complete analysis of the remains has been described in a paper published Tuesday (Jan. 13) in the journal The Anatomical Record.

The skeleton, designated KNM-ER 64061, was found in geological layers dated to between 2.02 million and 2.06 million years ago. A complete set of lower teeth clearly identified the skeleton as H. habilis. The skeleton included the collarbones; pieces of the shoulder blades; all of the upper and lower arm bones; and fragments of a vertebra, a rib, an upper leg bone, and the pelvis, making it the most complete H. habilis skeleton ever recovered, as well as one of the oldest, the researchers noted in the study. (The oldest H. habilis skeleton on record is from Ethiopia and dates to 2.33 million years ago.)


You may like

“There are only three other very fragmentary and incomplete partial skeletons known for this important species,” study lead author Fred Grine, a paleoanthropologist at Stony Brook University in New York, said in a statement. The find is significant because it represents both the most complete and the oldest partial skeleton of early Homo, the researchers wrote in the study.

H. habilis was a transitional species, in that it’s the first named species to kick-start our genus after evolving from australopithecines — the lineage that includes the celebrity fossil skeleton “Lucy” — but was distinct from our much better understood ancestor Homo erectus, which spread around the world. Fossils from H. habilis are therefore key to understanding the adaptations of our early hominin ancestors. Hominins include modern humans and our extinct relatives.

A close analysis of the KNM-ER 64061 fossils revealed that the arm bones of H. habilis were similar to those of other early Homo specimens and to those of some australopithecines. For example, H. habilis had a longer forearm than did the later H. erectus and had heavy, thick arm bones more similar to those of australopithecines.

Two views of a modern-human skeleton showing the bones of H. habilis that were discovered in 2012. (Image credit: Adapted from Grine, F. E. et al., 2026)

Based on the length of the humerus (the upper arm bone), the researchers determined that KNM-ER 64061 was a young adult who was about 5 feet, 3 inches (160 centimeters) tall. From the leg bone fragment, they estimated that the individual weighed only about 67.7 pounds (30.7 kilograms). These anatomical traits suggest that H. habilis retained upper-limb proportions similar to australopithecines’ and was shorter and weighed less than H. erectus.

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

But those traits don’t necessarily mean H. habilis could swing through the trees, according to the researchers. “The relatively long forearm of H. habilis may have enabled a greater degree of arboreal locomotion in this species than in H. erectus, but whether arboreality was indeed practiced by H. habilis must remain a matter of speculation,” they wrote in the study.

“Homo habilis limbs have been coming more and more into focus,” study co-author Ashley Hammond, a paleoanthropologist at the Catalan Institute of Paleontology Miquel Crusafont, said in the statement, and the new skeleton “confirms that the arms were fairly long and strong. What remains elusive is the lower limb build and proportions.”

Only a few fragments of KNM-ER 64061’s pelvis were recovered, but they suggest that this H. habilis individual may have walked more like H. erectus than like earlier australopithecines, the researchers noted in the study.

“Going forward, we need lower limb fossils of Homo habilis, which may further change our perspective on this key species,” Hammond said in the statement.

The discovery of a surprisingly complete H. habilis skeleton may also help paleoanthropologists sort out the abundance of hominin groups that lived in eastern Africa between 2.2 million and 1.8 million years ago.

Researchers have found that up to four hominin species — Paranthropus boisei, H. habilis, Homo rudolfensis and probably H. erectus — lived in the same place around the same time. And because H. erectus appeared nearly 500,000 years before H. habilis disappeared from the fossil record, it is currently unclear whether H. habilis was the ancestor to H. erectus or a related species.


Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Prehistoric water-dwelling weirdo with sideways teeth and a twisted jaw was already a ‘living fossil’ 275 million years ago

Prehistoric water-dwelling weirdo with sideways teeth and a twisted jaw was already a ‘living fossil’ 275 million years ago

Stone Age woman was buried like a man, revealing flexible gender roles 7,000 years ago in Hungary

Stone Age woman was buried like a man, revealing flexible gender roles 7,000 years ago in Hungary

JWST’s ‘little red dots’ could be the ‘parents’ of the universe’s first supermassive black holes

JWST’s ‘little red dots’ could be the ‘parents’ of the universe’s first supermassive black holes

Gold coin discovered by a metal detectorist in the UK may have been dropped by a Viking invader from the Great Heathen Army

Gold coin discovered by a metal detectorist in the UK may have been dropped by a Viking invader from the Great Heathen Army

‘An entirely new tool for cosmology’: The gravitational wave background could mend our broken understanding of the universe

‘An entirely new tool for cosmology’: The gravitational wave background could mend our broken understanding of the universe

March 3 ‘blood moon’ total lunar eclipse dazzles millions around the world (photos)

March 3 ‘blood moon’ total lunar eclipse dazzles millions around the world (photos)

Vanuatu’s ‘barefoot volcanologist’ stands at ash- and sulfur-spewing Mount Yasur in award-winning photograph

Vanuatu’s ‘barefoot volcanologist’ stands at ash- and sulfur-spewing Mount Yasur in award-winning photograph

Every ant is a queen in this parasitic species — and they reproduce by cloning themselves and hijacking other ant colonies

Every ant is a queen in this parasitic species — and they reproduce by cloning themselves and hijacking other ant colonies

3 rivers merge into striking half-and-half waterway in Guyana — Earth from space

3 rivers merge into striking half-and-half waterway in Guyana — Earth from space

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Cleveland, Ohio police find 2 girls dead in suitcases buried in shallow graves

Cleveland, Ohio police find 2 girls dead in suitcases buried in shallow graves

March 4, 2026
Madeline Ross Dead: Popular Streamer Adin Ross’ Sister Was 36, Medical Examiner Confirms

Madeline Ross Dead: Popular Streamer Adin Ross’ Sister Was 36, Medical Examiner Confirms

March 4, 2026
Jonathan Drouin, Ryan Pulock questionable for Islanders’ matchup with Ducks

Jonathan Drouin, Ryan Pulock questionable for Islanders’ matchup with Ducks

March 4, 2026
Heated GOP Texas Senate primary heads to runoff between Cornyn and Paxton

Heated GOP Texas Senate primary heads to runoff between Cornyn and Paxton

March 4, 2026

Subscribe to News

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

Latest News
United States and Ecuador launch joint operations against narco-terrorists

United States and Ecuador launch joint operations against narco-terrorists

March 4, 2026
3 Most Popular Netflix Movies Right Now (March 3-7): ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ and More

3 Most Popular Netflix Movies Right Now (March 3-7): ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ and More

March 3, 2026
Harrison Barnes’ 364-game ironman streak ends after he woke up from nap with ankle injury

Harrison Barnes’ 364-game ironman streak ends after he woke up from nap with ankle injury

March 3, 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.