Ida and Ardi: The Fossil Cover Girls of 2009
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Ida and Ardi: The Fossil Cover Girls of 2009. / Kjærgaard, Peter C.
In: The Evolutionary Review, Vol. 2, 2011, p. 1-9.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Ida and Ardi: The Fossil Cover Girls of 2009
AU - Kjærgaard, Peter C.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - By the autumn of 2009, contestants for the ultimate prize in the Greatest Show on Earth had narrowed down to two: from Germany, a flat, squirrel-sized lemur-looking creature in artificial resin and glass fibers; and from Ethiopia, a partial, small-brained hominin skeleton. Both had been locked away for years, guarded by their sentinels from the curious eyes of the public and from competitors supposedly lurking everywhere. On center stage were Darwinius massilae and Ardipithecus ramidus, or, as they were soon known to palaeontology geeks and breakfast television hosts alike, Ida and Ardi. The 47-million-year-old Ida was promoted as the Eighth Wonder of the World, a Rosetta Stone of palaeontology, the Holy Grail of human evolution. Her 4.4-million-year-old contender was advanced as the Real Thing and won the title as scientific breakthrough of the year. One was supposedly “our earliest ancestor,” the other “the oldest skeleton of a human ancestor.”
AB - By the autumn of 2009, contestants for the ultimate prize in the Greatest Show on Earth had narrowed down to two: from Germany, a flat, squirrel-sized lemur-looking creature in artificial resin and glass fibers; and from Ethiopia, a partial, small-brained hominin skeleton. Both had been locked away for years, guarded by their sentinels from the curious eyes of the public and from competitors supposedly lurking everywhere. On center stage were Darwinius massilae and Ardipithecus ramidus, or, as they were soon known to palaeontology geeks and breakfast television hosts alike, Ida and Ardi. The 47-million-year-old Ida was promoted as the Eighth Wonder of the World, a Rosetta Stone of palaeontology, the Holy Grail of human evolution. Her 4.4-million-year-old contender was advanced as the Real Thing and won the title as scientific breakthrough of the year. One was supposedly “our earliest ancestor,” the other “the oldest skeleton of a human ancestor.”
M3 - Journal article
VL - 2
SP - 1
EP - 9
JO - The Evolutionary Review
JF - The Evolutionary Review
SN - 2151-576X
ER -
ID: 160581452