That is an extract from Our Human Story, our publication concerning the revolution in archaeology. Signal as much as obtain it in your inbox each month.
100 years in the past, on 28 November 1924, anthropologist Raymond Dart opened a crate. It held a consignment of fossils from Taung, a quarry in South Africa, together with a small cranium that appeared part-ape, part-human. Dart named it “Australopithecus africanus: The Man-Ape of South Africa”. It was the primary Australopithecus specimen to be recognized, and the primary proof that early people advanced in…