Favonius Cornelius Posted May 11, 2009 Report Share Posted May 11, 2009 200,000 year old human hair found in dung By Richard Gray, Science Correspondent Palaeontologists found 40 strands of fossilised hair inside samples of coprolite, or fossilised dung, from a cave in South Africa that was used by brown hyaenas. Until now the oldest samples of human hair were from a 9,000 year old mummy found in northern Chile. It is extremely rare for soft tissue such as hair, skin and muscle to survive more than a few hundred years and only hard tissue like bone is fossilised normally. But scientists believe the new samples of hair are the remains of an early species of human that was scavenged by hyaenas after death, allowing the delicate hairs to be preserved inside the dung as it fossilised. As reported at Telegraph.co.uk... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sylla Posted May 11, 2009 Report Share Posted May 11, 2009 But scientists believe the new samples of hair are the remains of an early species of human that was scavenged by hyaenas after death, allowing the delicate hairs to be preserved inside the dung as it fossilised.As reported at Telegraph.co.uk... QUOTE: "Dr Backwell added: "Brown hyaenas are scavengers, not hunters, so the hominid was dead by the time the hyena came upon it..." These scientists seem to be as pious as they are misinformed; hyenids are actually far more predators than scavengers, and a tiny human would have had very little chance against a carnivore that regularly hunted medium to large sized ungulates. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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