from the collection of the
University of the Witwatersrand Discovery In 1924, Australian anatomist Professor
Raymond Dart, since 1923 working in South-Africa, was informed by one of his students, Josephine Salmons, that monkey fossils (of
Papio izodi) had been discovered by shotfirer M.G. de Bruyn in a
limestone quarry in
Taung, South Africa, operated by the Northern Lime Company. Knowing that Scottish geologist Professor
Robert Burns Young was at the time carrying out excavations in the area in search of
archaic human remains like
Homo rhodesiensis from
Kabwe, Zambia (at the time Broken Hill,
Northern Rhodesia) discovered in 1921, he asked his colleague to send him some primate remains from the quarry. However, Dart proposed that the bones were instead evidence of what he named the "
osteodontokeratic culture" produced by australopithecine hunters, who manufactured weapons using the
long bones, teeth, and horns of large hoofed prey: at the
Ditsong National Museum of Natural History, Pretoria Broom was one of the few scientists defending the close human affinities of
Australopithecus africanus. In 1936, he was informed by two of Dart's students, Trevor R. Jones and G. Schepers, that human-like remains had been discovered in the
Sterkfontein Cave quarries. On 9 August 1936, he asked G.W. Barlow to provide him with any finds. On 17 August 1936 he received an adult skull including a natural endocast, specimen Sts 60. However, Broom classified it as a new species, "
A. transvaalensis", and in 1938 moved it into a new genus as "
Plesianthropus transvaalensis". He also discovered the robust australopithecine
Paranthropus robustus, showing evidence of a wide diversity of
Early Pleistocene "man-apes". Before
World War II, several more sites bore
A. africanus fossils. A detailed monograph by Broom and palaeoanthropologist Gerrit Willem Hendrik Schepers in 1946 regarding these australopithecines from South Africa, as well as several papers by British palaeoanthropologist Sir
Wilfrid Le Gros Clark, had turned around scientific opinion, garnering wide support for
A. africanus classification as a human ancestor. Wider acceptance of
A. africanus prompted re-evaluation of Piltdown Man in 1953, revealing its falsehood. In 1949, Dart recommended splitting a presumed-female facial fragment from
Makapansgat, South Africa, (MLD 2) into a new species as "
A. prometheus". In 1954, he referred another presumed-female specimen from Makapansgat (a jawbone fragment). However, in 1953, South African palaeontologist
John Talbot Robinson believed that splitting species and genera on such fine hairs was unjustified, and that australopithecine remains from East Africa recovered over the previous couple of decades were indistinguishable from "
Plesianthropus"/
A. africanus. Based on this, in 1955, Dart agreed with synonymising "
A. prometheus" with
A. africanus because they are already quite similar to each other, and if speciation did not occur across a continent, then it quite unlikely occurred over a couple tens of kilometres according to Dart. The East African remains would be split off into
A. afarensis in 1978. In 2008, palaeoanthropologist
Ronald J. Clarke recommended reviving "
A. prometheus" to house the StW 573 nearly-complete skeleton ("
Little Foot"), StS 71 cranium, StW 505 cranium, StW 183
maxilla, StW 498 maxilla and jawbone, StW 384 jawbone, StS 1
palate, and MLD 2. In 2018, palaeoanthropologists
Lee Rogers Berger and
John D. Hawks considered "
A. prometheus" a
nomen nudum ("naked name"), and has not been properly described with diagnostic characteristics which separate it from
A. africanus. At the time, these remains were dated to 3.3 million years ago in the
Late Pliocene. In 2019, Clarke and South African palaeoanthropologist Kathleen Kuman redated StW 573 to 3.67 million years ago, making it the oldest
Australopithecus specimen from South Africa. They considered its antiquity further evidence of species distinction, drawing parallels with
A. anamensis and
A. afarensis from Middle Pliocene East Africa. Little foot is the most complete early hominin skeleton ever recovered, with about 90% preserved. Many hominin specimens traditionally assigned to
A. africanus have been recovered from Sterkfontein Member 4 (including Mrs. Ples and 2 partial skeletons), previously dated to 2.8 to 2.15 million years ago. But in 2022 a team including Clarke and Kuman used cosmogenic nuclide techniques to date Member 4 at 3.4 million years, which it says discredits the assumption that
A. africanus descended from
A. afarensis. However, given the wide range of variation exhibited by these specimens, it is debated if all these elements can be confidently assigned to only
A. africanus. At present, the classification of australopithecines is in disarray.
Australopithecus is considered a
grade taxon, whose members are united by their similar physiology rather than close relations with each other over other hominin genera. It is unclear how
A. africanus relates to other hominins. The discovery of
Early Pleistocene Homo in Africa during the latter half of the 20th century placed humanity's origins on the continent and
A. africanus as ancestral to
Homo. The discovery of
A. afarensis in 1978, at the time the oldest known hominin, prompted a hypothesis that
A. africanus was ancestral to
P. robustus, and
A. afarensis was the last common ancestor between
Homo and
A. africanus/
P. robustus. It is also suggested that
A. africanus is closely related to
P. robustus but not to the other
Paranthropus species in East Africa, or that
A. africanus is ancestral to all
Paranthropus.
A. africanus has also been postulated to have been ancestral to
A. sediba which also inhabited the Cradle of Humankind, perhaps contemporaneously.
A. sediba is also postulated to have been ancestral to
Homo, which if correct would indeed put
A. africanus in an ancestral position to
Homo. ==Anatomy==