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- Q310945 subject Q21722839.
- Q310945 subject Q8469939.
- Q310945 subject Q8766937.
- Q310945 subject Q8789771.
- Q310945 subject Q9421934.
- Q310945 abstract "Australopithecus bahrelghazali (KT-12/H1) is a fossil hominin discovered in 1995 by the paleontologist Michel Brunet in the Bahr el Ghazal valley near Koro Toro, in Chad. Named after the valley where it was discovered, Australopithecus bahrelghazali was dated by beryllium-based radiometric dating as living about 3.6 million years ago. The find consists of a mandibular fragment, a lower second incisor, both lower canines, and all four of its premolars, still affixed within the dental alveoli. The specimen locality is roughly 2,500 kilometers west of the East African Great Rift Valley, making it far removed from what broadly thought to be the "cradle" area of human evolution. (The specimen's proper name is KT-12/H1; Brunet named it Abel as a dedication to his deceased colleague Abel Brillanceau.)The KT-12/H1 mandible has similar features to the dentition of Australopithecus afarensis, which fact has caused researcher William Kimbel to argue that Abel is not a separate species, but "falls within the range of variation" of the species Australopithecus afarensis. By 1996, Brunet and his team classified KT-12/H1 as the holotype specimen for Australopithecus bahrelghazali.This claim is difficult to substantiate, as the describers, contrary to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, have kept the specimen locked away from inspection by the general paleoanthropological community.A. bahrelghazali is unique as it is the only australopithecine fossil found in Central Africa. It is also of great importance as it is the first fossil to show that there is a geographical "third window", that is, beyond East Africa and South Africa, of early hominin evolution.".
- Q310945 binomialAuthority Q2514726.
- Q310945 class Q7377.
- Q310945 conservationStatus "Fossil".
- Q310945 family Q242047.
- Q310945 family Q635162.
- Q310945 genus Q103237.
- Q310945 kingdom Q729.
- Q310945 order Q7380.
- Q310945 phylum Q10915.
- Q310945 wikiPageExternalLink austro.html.
- Q310945 wikiPageExternalLink bahrelghazali.htm.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q1010626.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q103237.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q107588.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q107685.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q10915.
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- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q214753.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q21722839.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q242047.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q2514726.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q27407.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q27433.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q2821485.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q40614.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q511893.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q569.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q635162.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q657.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q7205.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q729.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q7377.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q7380.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q7432.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q785292.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q8469939.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q8766937.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q8789771.
- Q310945 wikiPageWikiLink Q9421934.
- Q310945 binomialAuthority "Brunet et al., 1995".
- Q310945 classis "Mammalia".
- Q310945 familia Q635162.
- Q310945 genus "Australopithecus".
- Q310945 name "Australopithecus bahrelghazali".
- Q310945 ordo "Primates".
- Q310945 phylum Q10915.
- Q310945 regnum "Animalia".
- Q310945 status "Fossil".
- Q310945 subfamilia Q242047.
- Q310945 type Animal.
- Q310945 type Eukaryote.
- Q310945 type Mammal.
- Q310945 type Species.
- Q310945 type Thing.
- Q310945 type Q19088.
- Q310945 type Q729.
- Q310945 type Q7377.
- Q310945 comment "Australopithecus bahrelghazali (KT-12/H1) is a fossil hominin discovered in 1995 by the paleontologist Michel Brunet in the Bahr el Ghazal valley near Koro Toro, in Chad. Named after the valley where it was discovered, Australopithecus bahrelghazali was dated by beryllium-based radiometric dating as living about 3.6 million years ago. The find consists of a mandibular fragment, a lower second incisor, both lower canines, and all four of its premolars, still affixed within the dental alveoli.".
- Q310945 label "Australopithecus bahrelghazali".
- Q310945 name "Australopithecus bahrelghazali".