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Researcher Lee Berger holds a replica of the skull of a child he says was killed by an eagle like the model shown.
Researcher Lee Berger holds a replica of the skull of a child he says was killed by an eagle like the model shown.
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Johannesburg, South Africa – An American researcher believes he has solved the mystery of how one of the most important human predecessors died nearly 2 million years ago: An eagle killed the 3 1/2-year-old ape-human known as the Taung child.

The discovery suggests small human ancestors known as hominids had to survive being hunted not only by large predators on the ground but by fearsome raptors that swooped from the sky, said Lee Berger, a senior paleoanthropologist at Johannesburg’s University of the Witwatersrand.

“These types of discoveries give us real insight into the past lives of these human ancestors, the world they lived in and the things they feared,” Berger said in documents accompanying a presentation at a conference Thursday. “These are the stresses that formed the human mind and made us one of the most successful animals on the face of the planet.”

The discovery of the partial skull of a juvenile ape-man in South Africa’s North West Province in 1924 revealed a human ancestor species called Australopithecus africanus, which was proposed to be the “missing link” between apes and humans.

It also gave evidence that early humans evolved in Africa, rather than Europe and Asia, as most scientists believed at the time.

The child’s death has been blamed on a leopard or saber-toothed cat, which are known to have preyed on hominids. But 10 years ago, Berger and fellow researcher Ron Clarke submitted the theory that the hunter was a predatory bird, similar to today’s African crowned eagle.

Berger and Clarke argued the skulls and bones of monkeys and other animal fossils found at the Taung site, about 300 miles southwest of Johannesburg, showed evidence of damage by eagles.

Other researchers agreed eagles were most likely preying on small animals at the site but contended ape-men were too large, sophisticated and organized to be taken by a bird.

“The one big problem was the lack of multiple areas of damage on the Taung child itself that could be linked to a bird of prey,” Berger said. “We had one little flap of bone on the top of the skull that looked like some of the damage we see made by eagles and nothing else. … It was the ultimate 2 million-year-old cold case.”

Five months ago, researchers from Ohio State University submitted what Berger called the most comprehensive study to date of eagle damage on bones. Berger was among those asked to review the paper for the American Journal of Physical Anthropology.

The study by Scott McGraw, Catherine Cooke and Suzanne Schultz of primate remains from modern crowned eagle nests in Ivory Coast’s Tai forest showed raptors routinely hunt primates much larger than themselves by swooping down and piercing their skulls with their back talons.

The Ohio State paper identified key features that distinguished damage caused by eagles from that of other predators.

The study prompted Berger to re-examine the Taung skull.

“I picked up this little face, and I almost dropped it,” he said Thursday. There was a tiny hole and jagged tears at the base of the eye sockets that he and over two dozen other researchers had never noticed.

“I think … that we have conclusively proven beyond a reasonable doubt that that is the killer of the Taung child,” Berger said, looking up at a slide of an African crowned eagle.

McGraw, a co-author of the Ohio State study, agreed that “the evidence seems pretty compelling.”

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