Until now, Australopithecus africanus, which lived two to three million years ago in what is now South Africa, were not believed to have made tools the first evidence of which dates back to 2.6 million years ago but their hands suggest otherwise, according to a study in the journal Science.
A creature with an ape-like face and long arms, but that had a large brain and walked upright on two feet, Australopithecus africanus appears to have descended from the trees, gained hand dexterity and became capable of fine motor movements.
For instance, trabecular bones look very different in humans and chimpanzees, which cannot mimic the way a human hand can grip forcefully using thumb and fingers.
Neanderthal fossils, however, more closely resemble modern human hands in this regard. Neanderthals had the dexterity to use tools and make cave paintings.
Australopithecus, too, had "human-like trabecular bone pattern in the bones of the thumb and palm (the metacarpals) consistent with forceful opposition of the thumb and fingers typically adopted during tool use," the University of Kent said in a statement.
The study also included researchers from University College London, the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany and the Vienna University of Technology in Austria.
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