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In a previous study, researchers led by researcher Dr. Peter
In a previous study, researchers led by researcher Dr. Peter V. Koehler in the new study, said they had also found a new species of hominin known as Sotho-Tswana, from the world's only known cave system.
The discovery was made during a study of the Sotho-Tswana complex by two researchers, Dr. Peter Koehler and Dr. Andrew V. Rizzo. They were part of the team that led the Sotho-Tswana fossil exploration, along with Dr. Piotr Grzegorz, a member of the team, who conducted the latest research.
"I think it's a very exciting development and a very exciting time for the field of paleontology, and for our work on Homo naledi," Koehler said.
The discovery, which was made during a survey of the cave system, was made three years before the discovery of a new species of hominin, Homo ginsengensis, in the ancient world.
In the past 10 years, researchers have been working to discover fossils of the hominin species, but that didn't really take long for scientists to learn more about how the group evolved and what its features were.
"You might think that you've got fossils of individuals that are almost exactly the same in size, but all of a sudden those are only fossils," said Dr. Grzegorz. "In other words, a lot of the time, that's just a matter of how you characterize the groups that you see."
The group's early evolution occurred along the same path as that of Homo naledi, but it was much different from what we see today, said Dr. Grzegorz.
"In other words, most of the time, if you look for the same group that you see in a given place, you don't see it everywhere," he said.
Because of the fact that they were able to see the same structures as Homo naledi, it meant that it could be confirmed that hominin fossils in the Rising Star Cave System existed before then, said Dr. V. Koehler.
The researchers' findings suggest that the group was a relatively new evolution, but that they could also have been a sign of a more complex evolution.
"Our hypothesis was that this new group was some kind of hybrid of Homo naledi and Homo ginsengensis, which is something that we
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