Broca’s area, variation and taxic diversity in early Homo from Koobi Fora (Kenya)
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jats:pBecause brain tissues rarely fossilize, pinpointing when and how modern human cerebral traits emerged in the hominin lineage is particularly challenging. The fragmentary nature of the fossil material, coupled with the difficulty of characterizing such a complex organ, has been the source of long-standing debates. Prominent among them are the uncertainties around the derived or primitive state of the brain organization in the earliest representatives of the genus jats:italicHomo</jats:italic>, more particularly in key regions such as the Broca’s area. By revisiting a particularly well-preserved fossil endocast from the Turkana basin (Kenya), here we confirm that early jats:italicHomo</jats:italic> in Africa had a primitive organization of the Broca’s area ca. 1.9 million years ago. Additionally, our description of KNM-ER 3732 adds further information about the variation pattern of the inferior frontal gyrus in fossil hominins, with implications for early jats:italicHomo</jats:italic> taxic diversity (i.e. one or two jats:italicHomo</jats:italic> species at Koobi Fora) and the nature of the mechanisms involved in the emergence of derived cerebral traits.</jats:p>
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Funder: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
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2050-084X
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National Research Foundation (129336)
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CPJ-Hominines)
University of Cambridge (Harding Distinguished Postgraduate Scholars Programme)