¶ … evolution of man from the earliest australopithecine through to the three branches of the "family tree" to the dead end species of neanderthalensis and finally to modern homo sapiens:
The Ancestry of Man
Modern man has only been active within the archaeological time scale for a relative short time. Yet anatomically modern man did not just spring up from nowhere, he comes from a long line or hominids that extends back many millions of years. The species of Ardipithecus ramidus (sometimes known as Australopithecus ramidus) is the earliest known fossil of a hominid found, dating back to around 4.5 million years ago (mya) small hominid that stood upright, had teeth and skull closer and similar to that of apes, this gives them a closer lineage to those of chimpanzees than to humans. A.Ramidus only had a thin capping of enamel over his teeth, this is also a clear indication that his relation to the apes is closer that modern Homo Sapiens. Evidence shows that A. Ramidus lived in a wooded area this species is the first of the hominids to lie close to the divergence from African Apes (Fagan, 40)
This is followed by Australopithecus afarensis, this...
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