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Scientists CLASH Over Mysterious Fossilized Human Bones

In a controversial new interview with "New Scientist Magazine", archaeologist Lee Berger stated that he believes that the Middle Stone Age tool industry of Southern and Eastern Africa, as far north as Kenya, which is attributed to early Homo sapiens, could have been made by Homo naledi. In a counter-argument to criticism about Homo naledi, he said that archaeologists cannot assume that early modern humans were making those tools without evidence to back this up. In another article, Berger, whose team discovered the 300,000 year-old Homo naledi, near the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage site outside Johannesburg, said he is unconvinced that early modern humans lived all over Africa 300,000 years ago. “They’ve taken two data points and not drawn a line between them, but a giant map of Africa,” he said, a direct refutation of the "African multi-regional model". Furthermore, Berger and John Hawks wrote a paper in which they suggest that the south African Florisbad skull, dated to 260,000 years old, and attributed to early Homo sapiens, is in fact much younger and does not overlap with Homo naledi. In their paper, Hawks and Berger wrote that "The current data do not demonstrate the presence of Homo sapiens in southern Africa 260,000 years ago". CHAPTERS 0:00 PALEONTOLOGISTS CLASH OVER OUT OF AFRICA 3:00 IS SOUTHERN AFRICA THE CRADLE OF HUMANKIND? 8:00 WHERE MODERN HUMANS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA? 12:00 WHO MADE THE MIDDLE STONE AGE TOOLS? 18:00 EXTENDED INTERVIEWS Join this channel to get access to perks:    / @highlycompelling   SOURCES: https://johnhawks.net/weblog/how-old-... https://www.bbc.com/news/science-envi... https://www.theguardian.com/science/2...

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