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Orrorin tugenensis
The team that found these fossils in 2000 was led by Martin Pickford . Pickford claims that Orrorin is clearly a hominin; based on this, he dates the split between hominins and other African great apes to at least 7 million years ago. This date is markedly different from those derived using the molecular clock approach. Other fossils found in these rocks show that Orrorin lived in a wooded environment, not the savanna assumed by many theories of human evolution and, in particular, the origins of bipedalism. If Orrorin proves to be a human ancestor, Australopithecus afarensis (including "Lucy") would be on a side branch of the hominid family tree: Orrorin is both earlier, by 1.5 million years, and more similar to us than A. afarensis. There is, however, significant controversy over this point, and other researchers assert that Pickford et al. gloss over a number of uncertainties. External links
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