Experts In The News

Wired

It lived in Ethiopia and had characteristics similar to those of the australopithecines, but closer to those of the genus Homo

ABC News Australia

The discovery of a 2.8-million-year-old partial jawbone in Africa could rewrite the history of human evolution.

El Confidencial

A mandible found in Ethiopia is the most primitive remains ever found of the genus Homo, to which we belong, and directly connects it to earlier hominids like Australopithecus.

Yahoo!

A piece of jawbone with teeth attached, uncovered in Ethiopia, is the earliest known fossil of the genus Homo, to which humans belong, researchers said Wednesday.

Science Daily

The earliest known record of the genus Homo -- the human genus -- represented by a lower jaw with teeth, recently found in the Afar region of Ethiopia, dates to between 2.8 and 2.75 million years ago, according to an international team of geoscientists and anthropologists. They also dated other fossils to between 2.84 and 2.58 million years ago, which helped reconstruct the environment in which the individual lived.

Nature World News

Scientists have possibly discovered the first human ever to walk the Earth, based on an ancient jaw fossil from Ethiopia dating back 2.8 million years ago, according to new research that also reveals the conditions under which the earliest humans evolved.

Science Daily

A fossil lower jaw found in the Ledi-Geraru research area, Afar Regional State, Ethiopia, pushes back evidence for the human genus --Homo -- to 2.8 million years ago, according to a pair of reports published March 4 in the online version of the journal Science.

The Atlantic

There's been a lot of hubbub about the effort tech whiz Tony Hsieh and his crack team of acolytes have put into revitalizing downtown Las Vegas. In case you missed it, Hsieh, the CEO of Zappos, in January 2012 announced that he was putting $350 million into the Downtown Project, which would fund new businesses in an economically depressed part of the city seven miles north of the Las Vegas Strip. He also wanted to create a tech hub in a city better known for gambling and tourism, which some journalists dubbed the newest "techtopia."