Abstract
New approaches to the study of early hominin diets have refreshed interest in how and when our diets diverged from those of other African apes. A trend toward significant consumption of C4foods in hominins after this divergence has emerged as a landmark event in human evolution, with direct evidence provided by stable carbon isotope studies. In this study, we report on detailed carbon isotopic evidence from the hominin fossil record of the Shungura and Usno Formations, Lower Omo Valley, Ethiopia, which elucidates the patterns of C4dietary utilization in the robust homininParanthropus. The results show that the most important shift toward C4foods occurred at ∼2.37 Ma, within the temporal range of the earliest known member of the genus,Paranthropus aethiopicus, and that this shift was not unique toParanthropusbut occurred in all hominins from this fossil sequence. This uptake of C4foods by hominins occurred during a period marked by an overall trend toward increased C4grazing by cooccurring mammalian taxa from the same sequence. However, the timing and geographic patterns of hominin diets in this region differ from those observed elsewhere in the same basin, where environmental controls on the underlying availability of various food sources were likely quite different. These results highlight the complexities of dietary responses by hominins to changes in the availability of food resources.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
34 articles.
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