The 12 marks on the two bones were not caused by trampling but by stone tools used by our meat eating ancestors, researchers found.
"Our analysis clearly shows that the marks on these bones are not characteristic of trampling," said lead author Jessica Thompson, an assistant professor of anthropology at Emory University in US.
"The best match we have for the marks, using currently available data, would still be butchery with stone tools," Thompson said.
The study supports the original interpretation that the damage to the two bones is characteristic of stone tool butchery, published in the journal Nature in 2010.
That finding was sensational, since it potentially pushed back evidence for the use of stone tools, as well as the butchering of large animals, by about 800,000 years, researchers said.
For the current paper, Thompson and her co-authors examined the surfaces of a sample of more than 4,000 other bones from the same deposits.
They then used statistical methods to compare more than 450 marks found on those bones to experimental trampling marks and to the marks on the two controversial specimens.
Evidence shows that our genus, Homo, emerged around 2.8 million years ago. Until recently, the earliest known stone tools were 2.6 million years old.
One way that experimental archaeologists learn to interpret marks on fossil bones is by modifying modern-day bones.
They hit bones with hammer stones, feed them to carnivores and trample them on various substrates, then study the results.
Based on knowledge from such experiments, the researchers diagnosed the marks on the two bones from Dikika as butchery in a blind test, before being told the age of the fossils or their origin.
The researchers collected a random sample of fossils from the same deposits as the controversial specimens, as well as nearby deposits.
The study was published in The Journal of Human Evolution.
